When Fhenix went live for its recent technical broadcast, it felt less like a routine update and more like a coming-of-age moment for encrypted finance. Led by When Fhenix went live for its recent technical broadcast, it felt less like a routine update and more like a coming-of-age moment for encrypted finance. Led by

Fhenix Pushes Encrypted DeFi Forward with High-Performance FHE Infrastructure

2026/02/18 02:51
3 min read
  • Zyskind positioned FHE as a more comprehensive solution than privacy approaches such as Zero-Knowledge proofs, Trusted Execution Environments, or Multi-Party Computation.
  • With encrypted execution, validation, and settlement, sensitive information never appears in plaintext, even while the network processes it.

When Fhenix went live for its recent technical broadcast, it felt less like a routine update and more like a coming-of-age moment for encrypted finance. Led by founder Guy Zyskind, the session traced Fhenix’s evolution from a modest Layer 2 experiment into a full-stack infrastructure play for confidential DeFi. The guiding mantra was clear and repeated in spirit throughout the stream: FHE Everywhere, starting with private DeFi.

At the heart of the discussion was Fully Homomorphic Encryption, or FHE, a cryptographic breakthrough that allows data to remain encrypted even while being computed on. In traditional blockchain systems, transparency is both a virtue and a vulnerability. Smart contracts execute in public view, exposing transaction details that can invite front-running, copy trading, and strategic exploitation. FHE changes the rules of that game. With encrypted execution, validation, and settlement, sensitive information never appears in plaintext, even while the network processes it.

Zyskind positioned FHE as a more comprehensive solution than privacy approaches such as Zero-Knowledge proofs, Trusted Execution Environments, or Multi-Party Computation. Rather than selectively proving facts or relying on hardware assumptions, FHE keeps the entire lifecycle of data sealed in cryptographic armor. The result is what Fhenix describes as true encrypted execution.

One of the most notable technical announcements was CoFHE, an FHE coprocessor designed to offload heavy encrypted tasks from the main chain. Recently deployed on Base, CoFHE is stateless and lightweight, built to overcome the long-standing criticism that on-chain FHE is too slow for practical use. According to Fhenix, performance benchmarks show throughput improvements of up to 5,000 times compared to earlier systems. That shift transforms FHE from an academic curiosity into infrastructure capable of supporting real trading environments.

Complementing this is fhEVM, a developer-friendly environment that allows Solidity-based applications to handle encrypted data without drastic rewrites. For Ethereum builders, this lowers the barrier to integrating privacy into decentralized applications. Instead of abandoning familiar tooling, developers can extend it into confidential territory.

The broadcast also touched on advanced concepts such as verifiable encrypted computation and decentralized blind function verification, signaling that Fhenix is not only encrypting data but also ensuring that encrypted results remain provably correct. Built on Arbitrum and secured via EigenLayer, the stack aims to deliver high-throughput privacy suitable for real-world use cases, from confidential trading to business intelligence protection.

Perhaps the most striking institutional signal came from the claim that JP Morgan approached Fhenix regarding the tokenization of $1.5 trillion in assets under management. The barrier, according to Zyskind, was not tokenization mechanics but privacy. Without confidential infrastructure, large-scale asset tokenization becomes theoretically constrained.

Fhenix also linked FHE’s mathematical foundations to post-quantum cryptography, suggesting that building encrypted execution layers today could future-proof blockchains against tomorrow’s quantum threats.

What began as a “cool privacy experiment” now appears to be positioning itself as the backbone for confidential DeFi. In a landscape defined by radical transparency, Fhenix is betting that selective secrecy is not a contradiction, but the next competitive edge.

Market Opportunity
DeFi Logo
DeFi Price(DEFI)
$0.000325
$0.000325$0.000325
-10.22%
USD
DeFi (DEFI) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

NVIDIA Partners With India’s Top Manufacturers in $134B AI Factory Push

NVIDIA Partners With India’s Top Manufacturers in $134B AI Factory Push

The post NVIDIA Partners With India’s Top Manufacturers in $134B AI Factory Push appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Alvin Lang Feb 18, 2026 01:02 NVIDIA teams
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/02/18 09:12
Tesla's brand has gone negative, says investor who wants Rivian to buy the EV business

Tesla's brand has gone negative, says investor who wants Rivian to buy the EV business

Ross Gerber prominent Wall Street investor is calling on Tesla to sell its electric vehicle business to rival Rivian, saying the Tesla name has become a liability
Share
Cryptopolitan2026/02/18 09:38
Metaplanet Stock Slides as Top Japanese Bitcoin Treasury Sets Up Shop in Miami

Metaplanet Stock Slides as Top Japanese Bitcoin Treasury Sets Up Shop in Miami

The post Metaplanet Stock Slides as Top Japanese Bitcoin Treasury Sets Up Shop in Miami appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. In brief Tokyo-listed Metaplanet is expanding to the U.S. Its Miami-based subsidiary will initially have $15 million in capital. The firm meanwhile closed on its $1.45 billion public offering. Metaplanet, a Tokyo-listed hotel group that owns $2.3 billion worth of Bitcoin, said on Wednesday that its business is expanding to the U.S. The firm, which owns more than 20,000 Bitcoin, is establishing a subsidiary in Miami, Florida, to “manage and grow income-generation activities,” according to a press release. Metaplanet said the wholly-owned firm, dubbed Metaplanet Income Corp., will initially have $15 million in capital. It will provide its parent company with a better opportunity to “pursue derivatives operations and related activities that produce revenue,” Metaplanet added. The company’s shares changed hands around $4.06, falling nearly 4% on Wednesday, according to Yahoo Finance. The company’s stock price has plunged roughly 68% over the past three months from $12.90, although it has still increased 74% year-to-date.  Founded in 1999, Metaplanet has managed budget hotels across Japan, including “love hotels,” but Wednesday’s announcement makes no mention of hospitality. Rather, Metaplanet said the new subsidiary will be separate from its treasury operations. In the second quarter, Metaplanet disclosed an operating profit of ¥817 million ($5.5 million) on ¥1.23 billion ($8.4 million) in total sales, according to a shareholder presentation.  The performance was largely driven by Metaplanet’s income-generation segment, which generated ¥1.13 billion ($7.7 million) by selling Bitcoin put options. The derivatives are only profitable for buyers when Bitcoin’s spot price falls below an option’s given strike price. “This business has become our engine of growth, generating consistent revenue and net income,” Metaplanet President Simon Gerovich said on X on Wednesday. Gerovich separately said on Wednesday that Metaplanet had officially closed on its $1.45 billion offering of 385 million shares. More than 70 investors…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 13:49