Hedy Wang is the co‑founder of Block Street, a crypto infrastructure venture developing execution, lending, and liquidity tooling for tokenized equities. Multiple business and crypto publications have quoted her on Block Street’s strategy and the legal and market structure issues around decentralized finance, and she has been identified as the company’s CEO. [1] [2]
Hedy Wang completed graduate studies in Computer Science and Mathematics at Harvard University between August 2018 and December 2020, earning a Master of Science (MS). Her coursework included Statistics and Mathematics. During the same period, she was enrolled in a joint Master of Science (MS) program in Computational and Applied Mathematics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with coursework in Artificial Intelligence (AI), Engineering, and related subjects.
From March 2015 to June 2018, Wang participated in an exchange program at University of California, Los Angeles, where she attended PhD-level courses in Artificial Intelligence, Statistics, and MBA entrepreneurship. Between July 2016 and July 2017, she also took part in an exchange program at Stanford University. [3] [4]
Hedy Wang’s early professional background has been described in media author profiles as involving product leadership and quantitative finance. Her author page at AI Journal states that she worked as a product leader at Capital One, contributing to a credit card product serving approximately 40 million customers. Additional educational materials have attributed prior experience to roles at Apollo and Cubist Systematic Strategies; these attributions originate from secondary sources and may require confirmation through primary records, which served as a basis for later work with web3.
From February 2019 to February 2020, Wang held the position of Risk and Product Manager at Capital One, where she worked on product development, risk systems, and valuation models related to large-scale credit operations.
Between February 2020 and October 2024, she served as a Portfolio Manager at a multi-strategy family office in the New York City metropolitan area. In that role, she managed quantitative investment portfolios with assets exceeding $100 million and developed trading infrastructure focused on execution, risk management, and analytics.
In October 2024, Wang became co-founder and chief executive officer of Block Street. Media coverage by The Defiant identified her in this capacity in November 2025. Other directory listings similarly describe her as CEO and co-founder and reference her public statements on digital asset regulation and institutional participation.
Earlier descriptions of her career in media sources characterize her work as spanning product development, quantitative investment management, and financial infrastructure. [5] [6] [2] [7]
“Our mandate is infra, not just an app.” In the same coverage, she said Monad’s parallel EVM provided settlement guarantees and a latency budget aligned with institutional expectations, while products like Aqua and Everst aimed to implement best‑execution and equity‑native risk controls directly on‑chain. [1]
“When a Cayman court blocks Maple from launching a competing BTC product, it’s basically a reminder that off‑chain contracts still matter, even in DeFi. … DeFi isn’t lawless. The moment you incorporate, raise capital, or work with a foundation, you’re under traditional rules.” [2]
“Our mission has always been to make stock trading as free and global as the Internet. … Together, we’re turning tokenized stocks from static wrappers into financial primitives.” [10]
Most mainstream crypto business coverage and author pages identify her as “Hedy Wang,” including a September 2025 partnership article and the October 2025 funding coverage. However, several outlets—including a funding roundup and ecosystem explainers—have referred to her as “Hedy Wong.” Her LinkedIn display name appears as “Hedy W.” [1] [9]
In an interview published on November 27, 2025, on the YouTube channel hosted by Michael Peres, Hedy Wong discussed her transition from traditional finance to Web3, along with her views on financial markets, digital assets, and emerging technologies.
Peres describes Wong’s professional background as including work in portfolio engineering at Cubist and involvement in credit risk systems at Capital One. In this context, her transition to the cryptocurrency sector is presented as a shift from established financial systems toward the development of alternative infrastructure models.
According to the host’s account, Wong explains tokenization as a mechanism that alters how assets are issued, held, and traded. The discussion outlines characteristics such as fractional ownership, continuous market access, and cross-border participation, which differ from conventional financial market structures.
The interview also addresses current market conditions. Peres presents Wong’s view that recent volatility can be associated with increased participation from new market entrants and the interaction between traditional financial systems and digital asset markets. The discussion situates these dynamics within a broader process of market development.
Peres further reports Wong’s observations regarding regulatory and institutional factors, particularly in the United States. These include references to evolving regulatory clarity and the participation of financial institutions, which are described as contributing elements in the current stage of the sector. Tokenized assets and stablecoin-based systems are discussed as components connecting different financial frameworks.
The conversation includes references to the role of artificial intelligence in financial markets. According to Peres, Wong states that automated systems may influence trading speed and data processing, while aspects such as long-term strategy and risk assessment continue to involve human decision-making.
Additional topics include the relationship between digital infrastructure and economic activity. Peres notes that Wong refers to the potential effects of automation and network-based systems on work structures and access to financial services. The interview also includes references to professional development practices, such as mentorship and industry networking, within the context of participation in Web3-related fields. [14]