Author: Plain Language Blockchain In early March 2026, American actor William Shatner—who plays Captain Kirk in Star Trek—posted a screenshot on X. Nothing seriousAuthor: Plain Language Blockchain In early March 2026, American actor William Shatner—who plays Captain Kirk in Star Trek—posted a screenshot on X. Nothing serious

With an annualized return of 6%, Musk declares war on traditional banks.

2026/03/06 14:00
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Author: Plain Language Blockchain

In early March 2026, American actor William Shatner—who plays Captain Kirk in Star Trek—posted a screenshot on X.

With an annualized return of 6%, Musk declares war on traditional banks.

Nothing serious, he's just testing a new product called X Money.

The screenshot shows a line of numbers: annualized return: 6%.

This post didn't get many shares, but it quietly caused a stir in the financial world.

It wasn't because of William Shatner, but because of that 6%.

If you open a regular savings account at JPMorgan Chase, the interest rate is 0.01%. The answer is similar at Wells Fargo. Deposit $100, and after a year, the big bank gives you one cent. But X Money gives you $6.

The difference is 600 times.

This is how Musk declared war on traditional finance—not with a technical white paper, nor with regulatory lobbying, but with a screenshot.

01. A black metal card

X Money's appearance is easy to understand: a digital wallet that can send, receive, and deposit money, and also comes with a physical debit card.

But every detail reveals ambition.

That debit card is made of black metal, with your X username (Handle) laser-engraved on it. Not your name, not your account number, but your social identity on the X platform.

This design is no accident. It links social media accounts with spending power, so every time you pay, you're not just displaying a payment tool, but your digital identity. This is how the stickiness of the X ecosystem is built up layer by layer.

On the settlement side, X Money has integrated with Visa Direct. While traditional bank ACH transfers take 1 to 3 business days to arrive, Visa Direct delivers funds instantly. For the gig economy and content creators, this speed difference represents a tangible improvement in their experience.

Deposits are held in custody by Cross River Bank (a member bank of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation), and each user is protected by up to $250,000 in FDIC insurance.

To summarize this product in one sentence: 6% APY, laser-engraved black metal card, instant settlement, zero overseas transaction fees, and insurance coverage up to 250,000.

Looking at the parameter table alone, it's hard to find fault with it.

02. Why can it be given 6%?

This is the most crucial issue.

Where does the 6% APY come from? X Money isn't burning money to subsidize users—at least not in its current business logic. The answer lies in a seemingly insignificant difference in cost structure.

Traditional large banks maintain a complete physical network: branches, tellers, ATM fleets, and decades-old IT systems. These represent huge fixed costs that remain regardless of changes in deposit volume.

X Money is a cloud-native, API-first platform with no physical branches and no historical baggage. X is responsible for the front-end user experience, while Cross River Bank handles banking compliance and fund custody. This embedded financial model, where the front-end is handled by a technology company and the back-end by a licensed bank, significantly reduces operating costs, allowing the saved resources to be allocated to users.

This logic itself is not new. Robinhood, Ally Bank, and SoFi are all following the same path.

But X Money has something that traditional fintech companies generally lack: over 500 million monthly active users and almost zero user acquisition cost (CAC).

There's no need to spend money to acquire new users; you just need to keep the money of existing users on X within X as well.

03. Who is being threatened?

X Money has far more competitors to squeeze than it appears on the surface.

First, there's the traditional deposit market.

The business model of large banks relies on one premise: depositors have no better options or are too lazy to switch.

A 6% APY breaks this premise. When over 500 million users have access to this rate, the pressure of capital migration becomes real. To retain depositors, banks are forced to raise their deposit rates, thus compressing interest rate spreads. In the US banking industry, approximately 60% of revenue comes from net interest margins; this is no small matter, but a systemic upheaval in the profit structure.

Secondly, there is the payment intermediary layer.

Venmo, PayPal, and Cash App, these social payment players, have become accustomed to their position in this field. However, none of them possess a social platform with over 500 million users as a traffic entry point.

X Money's core logic is to build a "closed-loop funding system": money comes in, circulates within the X ecosystem, and is used for content tipping, subscriptions, and product purchases, without needing to flow out. Once the closed loop is formed, the intermediary role of companies like PayPal will be marginalized.

Finally, there's cross-border remittance.

According to World Bank data from the first quarter of 2025, the average cost of global cross-border remittances is approximately 6.49%, and funds often take several days to arrive. X Money, leveraging Visa Direct's global network, aims to significantly reduce this cost and achieve near real-time transfers. Western Union and MoneyGram's business in X Money's densely populated markets, such as India, Indonesia, and Brazil, is X Money's most direct target.

04. Regulatory Battlefield

However, whether the threat can be fulfilled depends on regulation.

X Payments LLC currently holds Money Transfer Licenses (MTLs) in more than 40 states and Washington, D.C. But there is one state that has yet to grant its request: New York.

New York State legislators have publicly written to the State Department of Financial Services (DFS), requesting that X be denied a license. The reasons cited include: Musk's historically hostile attitude towards regulators, vulnerabilities in X's identity verification mechanisms, and a more sensitive allegation—that during Musk's tenure at the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), his staff reportedly had access to consumer payment data from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), which theoretically contains trade secrets from competitors.

If the accusation that regulators are also involved in competition is proven true, it will trigger a series of antitrust lawsuits.

Another variable is the GENIUS Act. This stablecoin legislation, which will be officially signed into law in July 2025, explicitly prohibits issuers of payment-type stablecoins from paying any form of yield or interest to holders.

Currently, X Money pays 6% APY on fiat currency deposits using traditional bank deposit agreements, which poses no direct problem under the existing framework. However, if X wants to convert account balances into stablecoins or deeply integrate crypto assets such as Dogecoin and XRP in the future, the GENIUS Act's prohibition on yields will directly block this path.

Musk needs to prove to regulators that the 6% is compliant bank deposit interest, not a disguised form of unregistered securities income, nor a prohibited stablecoin dividend.

05. Grok enters the field.

If 6% APY is X Money's entry ticket, then Grok is the moat it wants to build.

Elon Musk's AI Grok is deeply integrating with financial functions. Musk's vision is that Grok is not just a chatbot, but a "smart agent" that can perform financial responsibilities—buying and selling based on real-time public opinion on the platform, automatically allocating funds between products of different risk levels, and even directly jumping to the trading interface through the "Smart Cashtags" function while users are browsing posts.

This is a new product format: viewing content and managing assets all happen within the same interface.

Traditional wealth management companies rely on information asymmetry and human service fees. However, this informational advantage diminishes when AI can process massive amounts of social data and market signals at millisecond speeds.

For creators, the changes are more direct: tips, subscription revenue sharing, and advertising income go directly into the X Wallet with a 6% APY, without going through an intermediary bank account. X is turning itself into a settlement center for creators—their de facto "bank."

06. Summary

The success of WeChat Pay and Alipay in China has been the envy of countless American tech companies, yet none have been able to replicate it. The reasons are multifaceted: more decentralized financial regulation in the US, consumer accustomed to credit card cashback culture, and barriers existing between different platforms.

X Money is by far the closest attempt to this goal.

It has a user base, AI capabilities, Visa's global network, a founder who doesn't care about existing rules—and a bunch of regulators and politicians waiting to cause it trouble.

The outcome of this power struggle will gradually become clear over the next 18 months. If X Money can secure a New York license, maintain compliance with the GENIUS Act, and successfully implement Grok's AI-powered wealth management features, it might truly become the US version of a super app.

If not, all that's left is a nice black metal card and a good interest rate of 6%.

For traditional banks and payment giants, the difference between these two outcomes is a matter of life and death for the company.

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