By Shulevitz Media Group
Shulevitz Holdings has done it again. With the launch of Shulevitz Payments, the company has transformed $SHULEVITZ from a high-flying Solana token into something far more disruptive: a real, spendable currency. And in true Shulevitz fashion, the deal is sweeter if you’re paying in crypto.
$20 in $SHULEVITZ = $50 in Cash
Starting today, anyone signing up for CapitalConnect.com—the social network bridging startups, investors, and lenders—can choose how they want to pay for their profile. The standard cost? $50 USD. But for $SHULEVITZ holders, that price drops to just $20 worth of tokens.
That’s not just a discount—it’s a statement. Shulevitz Holdings is rewarding its own community, putting utility behind the coin, and proving that $SHULEVITZ is more than just a ticker symbol on Dexscreener.
The Bigger Play
CapitalConnect has been described as the “LinkedIn meets Zillow of venture capital,” a platform designed to accelerate funding connections around the world. By weaving $SHULEVITZ directly into the signup process, Shulevitz Payments creates the first bridge between crypto liquidity and real startup deal-making.
For early adopters, this is more than a chance to save $30 on a profile. It’s the beginning of a parallel economy—one where the Shulevitz ecosystem controls its own rails.
A Founder’s Vision
Yeshaya Shulevitz, the 18-year-old founder behind the brand, has been vocal about his mission to build a vertically integrated empire: media, payments, venture, and more. Shulevitz Payments is the missing link, bringing the $SHULEVITZ token into everyday business transactions.
“Cash is cash,” says one insider, “but $SHULEVITZ is becoming culture.”
What’s Next
The integration with CapitalConnect is only the first step. According to sources inside Shulevitz Holdings, Shulevitz Payments will soon power transactions across Shulevitz Media Group (SMG) for paid articles, and even future features on the upcoming Shulevitz Exchange.
For now, one thing is clear: $SHULEVITZ is no longer just a speculative asset. It’s a currency. And in the Shulevitz universe, it even beats cash.

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