Midnight launches: Cardano’s new gambling model for compliant finance

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Midnight Foundation officially brought the Midnight network online on March 29, with its genesis block recorded from March 17. This event marks the first real-world test of Charles Hoskinson’s long-standing thesis: public blockchains are difficult to access for managed finance, digital identity, and enterprise applications unless privacy and compliance are integrated from the underlying architecture.

Cardano: big valuation, limited on-chain activity

Cardano entered this test from a special position. The network currently has a market capitalization exceeding $9.1 billion, with about 672 active developers according to data from Electric Capital, but the DeFi ecosystem has not yet reflected its valuation scale proportionately.

According to DefiLlama, Cardano’s total value locked (TVL) is only around $134 million, with $47 million in stablecoins and fewer than $2,000 in transaction fees per day. The gap between market expectations and real usage remains clearly visible.

Midnight is built on the assumption that a “privacy-first” infrastructure can attract user groups and use cases that the Cardano base layer previously did not target.

Privacy becomes a structural issue in the market

Within the broader market context, demand for privacy is becoming increasingly evident. Aleo’s 2025 report shows that the total stablecoin volume from institutions is $1.22 trillion, but only 0.0013% is processed on private infrastructures.

At the same time, McKinsey & Company predicts that tokenized financial assets could reach about $2 trillion by 2030, while data from RWA.xyz currently records around $26.67 billion in tokenized assets.

At this scale, absolute transparency on public blockchains becomes a barrier: trading positions, counterparties, and reserve data are all exposed—something that does not align with compliance requirements in traditional finance.

Midnight architecture: solving the privacy–compliance problem

Midnight directly tackles this bottleneck. The network architecture allows institutions to prove compliance or liquidity without publicly disclosing sensitive data.

Some core components include:

  • Compact: a smart contract language influenced by TypeScript, making it easier for enterprises to adopt
  • Dual token model NIGHT/DUST: separate governance and security (NIGHT) from transaction costs (DUST)
  • Ability to conceal the level of crypto exposure for end users, an important factor for institutional clients

Competition in the privacy + compliance space

Midnight is not alone in this race. A number of other projects are also pursuing the combination of privacy and compliance:

  • Aztec: combines public/private state with a client-side proving mechanism
  • Namada: uses viewing keys to selectively display data
  • Aleo: developing private stablecoins by default

Midnight’s differentiator lies in its tight linkage with the Cardano ecosystem: leveraging staking from SPO, integrating the Lace wallet, and launching tokens on the Cardano mainnet.

Partner ecosystem: an advantage or a barrier?

Midnight launches with a federated operating model, with participation from multiple major names such as Google Cloud, MoneyGram, Worldpay, and Bullish.

This model helps reduce trust barriers for financial institutions, but it also raises questions about the degree of decentralization—an essential element of blockchain.

Some notable experiments:

  • Monument Bank is expected to bring £250 million in tokenized deposits to Midnight
  • Worldpay is testing stablecoin payments
  • Bullish is developing a proof-of-reserves system on a private layer

However, all of this is still in the proof-of-concept stage.

Growth scenarios and risks

In a positive scenario, the market will see:

  • Monument Bank rolling out real tokenization within 90 days
  • Partners like Worldpay or MoneyGram announcing operational products
  • A clear increase in the number of real applications

Conversely, a negative scenario includes:

  • Application ecosystem remains thin through mid-2026
  • Commitments only stop at announcements, with no real deployments
  • Criticism over increasing centralization

Conclusion

Midnight represents Cardano’s most ambitious effort to expand into managed finance—the area where traditional transparent blockchains face many limitations.

Now, Charles Hoskinson has a “full stack” at his disposal, from governance to interoperability with identity and privacy.

However, the final answer does not lie in technology, but in whether institutions actually deploy products, whether capital flows are truly tokenized, and whether users genuinely use the network or not.

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