TLDR
- Mizuho says X Money could disrupt U.S. payments and pressure PayPal and Venmo.
- New York’s CRYPTO Act could raise legal risks for any future X crypto features.
- The Clarity Act could limit non-bank firms from offering yield on customer balances.
- Mizuho said X Money’s planned 6% APY faces close timing with new federal debate.
- Senator Elizabeth Warren questioned X Money over stablecoins, yield, and user protections.
X Money is shaping up as Elon Musk’s push into digital payments, and analysts say it could challenge major players. Mizuho said the product may pressure PayPal and Venmo, but any crypto feature could face tougher rules. New York’s proposed CRYPTO Act and debate around the Clarity Act may complicate that path. The setup puts X Money at the center of both payments growth and rising regulation.
X Money enters a crowded payments market
Mizuho analysts said X Money could become a new payments layer inside X. They said the product fits Musk’s goal of building an everything app. The note compared that model with WeChat Pay and Alipay. It also pointed to X’s large user base as a core advantage.
The analysts said X has about 500 million to 600 million monthly active users. That reach may help X Money gain traction in peer-to-peer payments. It may also support wallet services and online commerce tools. Those areas already matter for PayPal and Venmo.
Elon Musk was pushed out at PayPal. Now he’s launching a rival that could ‘disrupt’ it. https://t.co/tbPZL0E9KL
— MarketWatch (@MarketWatch) April 16, 2026
Mizuho downgraded PayPal to neutral in the same note. The firm said PayPal and Venmo face the clearest substitution risk. That risk comes from overlapping users and similar wallet functions. X Money could target the same daily payment habits.
Crypto plans may face new legal barriers
Mizuho also warned that crypto integration could face legal trouble in New York. The analysts wrote that the proposed CRYPTO Act would raise the stakes. The bill would criminalize unlicensed virtual currency business activity in the state. That could make future crypto services harder to launch.
The analysts said X Money’s crypto path remains only a potential future step. Still, they said the proposed law could shape that decision early. New York often plays an outsized role in U.S. financial rules. So, companies usually watch that market closely.
This policy debate comes as X expands finance tools on its platform. X recently introduced Cashtags for stocks and cryptocurrencies in timelines. That feature lets users view market data inside the app. It also shows X’s growing interest in financial services.
Yield plans draw fresh questions in Washington
Mizuho said another concern involves X Money’s reported 6% APY plan. The analysts said the timing is sensitive because of the Clarity Act debate. Lawmakers are still discussing whether non-bank platforms should offer yield. That debate has centered on stablecoins and user protections.
Senator Elizabeth Warren also raised questions about the product this week. According to reports cited in the source material, she asked Musk about stablecoins. She also asked how X Money could support a 6% deposit rate. In her view, users need clear information about risk and insurance limits.
Her letter also raised concerns about financial stability and national security. Warren questioned whether X Money may launch its own stablecoin. She noted that stablecoin balances do not carry FDIC insurance. Those questions add more pressure as X prepares its payments push.







