Author: Decentralised.Co
Compiled by: Block unicorn
This article is inspired by a series of conversations with Ganesh Swami, covering the seasonality of revenue, the evolution of business models, and whether token buybacks are the best use of protocol capital. This is a supplement to my previous article on the stagnation of cryptocurrencies.
Private capital markets like venture capital oscillate between excess liquidity and scarcity. When these assets become liquid and external capital flows in, market frenzy drives up prices. Think of newly launched IPOs or token offerings. The newfound liquidity allows investors to take on more risk, which in turn spawns a new generation of companies. As asset prices rise, investors seek to shift capital to early applications, hoping for returns higher than benchmarks like ETH and SOL. This is a feature, not a bug.
The liquidity of cryptocurrencies follows the cyclical pattern of Bitcoin halvings. Historically, market rallies have occurred within six months of a Bitcoin halving. In 2024, ETF inflows and Saylor's purchases will become Bitcoin's supply absorbers. Saylor alone spent $22.1 billion on Bitcoin last year. But last year's Bitcoin price surge did not translate into a rebound in the long tail of Altcoins.
We are witnessing an era where capital allocators are liquidity-constrained, with attention scattered across thousands of assets, while founders who have toiled on tokens for years struggle to find meaning in it. Why would anyone bother building real applications when Meme assets can generate more financial returns? In previous cycles, L2 tokens enjoyed a premium due to exchange listings and venture capital support, as they represented cognitive value. But as more participants enter the market, this cognition (and its valuation premium) is disappearing.
As a result, the valuations of L2 tokens have declined, limiting their ability to subsidize smaller products through grants or token-based revenue. This valuation overhang in turn forces founders to confront an age-old question that plagues all economic activity - where does the revenue come from?
So Transactional
The image above nicely illustrates the typical workings of cryptocurrency revenue. For most products, the ideal state is that of AAVE and Uniswap. Attributable to the Lindy effect or early mover advantage, these two products have maintained fees for years. Uniswap can even increase front-end fees and generate revenue. This speaks to the degree of consumer preference definition. Uniswap to decentralized exchanges is like Google to search.
In contrast, the revenue of friendtech and OpenSea is seasonal. The NFT summer saw the market cycle last two quarters, while social finance speculation lasted only two months. If the scale of revenue is large enough and aligned with product intent, speculative revenue makes sense. Many Meme trading platforms have joined the $100 million+ fee club. This scale is what most founders can hope for at best through tokens or acquisitions. But for most founders, this level of success is rare. They are not building consumer applications; they are focused on infrastructure, where revenue dynamics are different.
Between 2018 and 2021, VCs heavily funded developer tools, hoping developers would attract large user bases. But by 2024, two major shifts have occurred in the ecosystem. First, smart contracts have enabled limitless scaling with minimal human intervention. Uniswap or OpenSea don't need to scale their teams proportionally to transaction volume. Second, advancements in LLMs and AI have reduced the investment demand for cryptocurrency developer tools. As a category, it is now in a moment of reckoning.
In Web2, the API-based subscription model worked because of the massive online user base. However, Web3 is a smaller niche market, with few applications scaling to millions of users. Our advantage is the high revenue metrics per user. Cryptocurrency users tend to spend more money more frequently, as blockchains enable this - they make money flow possible. Therefore, over the next 18 months, most businesses will have to redesign their business models to directly extract revenue from users in the form of transaction fees.
This is not a new concept. Stripe initially charged per API call, Shopify charged a fixed subscription fee, and both later shifted to revenue-share models. For infrastructure providers, this transition is quite direct in Web3. They will compete on API pricing, even potentially offering products for free up to a certain transaction volume, before negotiating revenue-share. This is the ideal hypothetical scenario.
What would this look like in practice? One example is Polymarket. Currently, the UMA protocol's tokens are used for dispute resolution, with the tokens tied to the disputes. The more markets, the higher the probability of disputes. This drives demand for UMA tokens. In the trading model, the required margin can be a small fraction of the total bet, say 0.10%. For example, a $1 billion bet on the presidential election outcome would generate $1 million in revenue for UMA. In the hypothetical, UMA could use this revenue to buy back and burn their tokens. This approach has its benefits and challenges, and we'll see it play out soon.
Another participant doing this is MetaMask. The transaction volume processed through its embedded exchange feature is around $36 billion. The exchange revenue alone exceeds $300 million. A similar model applies to staking providers like Luganode, where fees are based on the amount of staked assets.
But in a market where API call costs are increasingly declining, why would developers choose one infrastructure provider over another? If revenue-sharing is required, why choose one oracle over another? The answer lies in network effects. Data providers that support multiple blockchains, offer unparalleled data granularity, and can index new chains faster will become the preferred choice for new products. The same logic applies to intent or Gas-less exchange drivers. The more chains supported, the lower the profit margins, the faster the speed, the more likely to attract new products, as this marginal efficiency helps retain users.
All Burned
The shift of tying token value to protocol revenue is not new. In recent weeks, several teams have announced mechanisms to buyback or burn tokens proportional to revenue. Notable among these are SkyEcosystem, Ronin Network, Jito SOL, Kaito AI, and Gearbox Protocol. Token buybacks are similar to stock buybacks in the US equity market - essentially a way to return value to shareholders (or in this case, token holders) without violating securities laws. In 2024, the US market alone had around $790 billion in stock buybacks, up from $170 billion in 2000. Whether these trends will continue remains to be seen, but we see a clear bifurcation in the market - tokens with cash flows and a willingness to invest in their own value, and those with neither.
For most early protocols or dApps, using revenue to buyback their own tokens may not be the best use of capital. One way to execute such operations is to allocate sufficient capital to offset the dilution from new token issuances. This is how the Kaito founders recently explained their token buyback approach. Kaito is a centralized company that uses tokens to incentivize its user base. The company generates centralized cash flows from its enterprise clients. They use a portion of this cash flow to execute buybacks through market makers. The purchased amount is double the new issuances, effectively making the network deflationary.
Ronin, on the other hand, has taken a different approach. The blockchain adjusts fees based on the number of transactions per block. During peak usage periods, a portion of the network fees goes into Ronin's treasury. This is a way to control the asset supply without necessarily buying back the tokens themselves. In both cases, the founders have designed mechanisms to tie value to network economic activity.
In future articles, we will delve deeper into the impact of these operations on the price and on-chain behavior of the tokens involved in such activities. But what is evident now is that - with valuations being suppressed and the amount of venture capital flowing into cryptocurrencies decreasing, more teams will have to compete for the marginal funds flowing into our ecosystem. Since the blockchain is essentially a capital track, most teams will shift to a fee-per-transaction model. When this happens, if the teams are tokenized, they will have an incentive to issue buyback and burn models. Teams that do this well will become winners in the liquidity markets.
Of course, one day, all this talk about prices, yields, and revenues will become irrelevant. We will once again spend money on dog photos and buy monkey NFTs. But if I look at the current state of the market, most founders concerned about survival have already started discussions around revenue and burning.