Blockchain progress through the lens of Binance's $180MM profit and Greensill's $1.5B SoftBank raise; plus 14 short takes on top developments

Blockchain progress through the lens of Binance's $180MM profit and Greensill's $1.5B SoftBank raise; plus 14 short takes on top developments

Hi Fintech futurists --

In the long take this week, I look at the difference between (1) building out the crypto asset class, and (2) operating infrastruture for a blockchain-based digital economy. There are so many little logic pot holes into which you could fall! There are so many things one could believe that make the whole thing make no sense at all! I am anchoring around two primary data points -- a Multicoin report about Binance's financial progress and its massive (though unaudited) $180 million profit in Q3 of 2019, and a post by supply chain company Centrifuge about marrying cashflow financing with the decentralized web.

The latest short takes on the Fintech bundles, Crypto and Blockchain, Artificial Intelligence, and Augmented and Virtual Reality are below. Thanks for reading and let me know your thoughts by email or in the comments! Last but not least, these opinions are personal (or maybe made by a robot) and do not reflect any views of ConsenSys or other parties.


Long Take

I have been thinking about blockchain use-cases, adoption curves, and jumping the chasm for Web3 software. Let's start with the easy stuff. Binance is killing it. Since 2017, they have out-executed crypto exchanges, decentralized exchanges, fintech broker/dealers, and everyone else trying to get day traders to day trade. As I understand, this was accomplished through a combination of multi-level marketing, extremely quick technology builds, some of the lowest pricing in the industry, and regulatory arbitrage. The crypto trader market is now 60% owned by Binance, and Binance is being a fast mover to capitalize on this advantage. They are throwing off massive amounts of cash -- $1 billion to date -- and reinvesting that in the business. The difference between subsisting on venture financing and being cashflow positive is the difference between being underwater on your mortage and owning your home outright.

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Further, Binance is quickly going horisontal and creating cross-sell between trading, margin, staking, and decentralized offerings. Whereas American exchanges like Coinbase are wading their way throuh a morass of a regulatory landscape, Binance is launching features and spreading its jurisdiction octopus across the world. Where it needs to be compliant, it is spinning up subsidiaries and following local law. But for most of the crypto trader world, this is an afterthought. Binance may not get every large token offering from CoinList (e.g., Nervos), and it won't ouperform ConsenSys on Ethereum, but it will certainly get many others.

Yet after all this profit and success, it does not feel like sufficient progress to me. And the reason is simple. There are two vectors for blockchain innovation worth considering -- (1) investing in the asset class itself, and (2) the operating transformation of the digital economy. Crypto was born for payments on the web with Bitcoin, but quickly became a killer use-case for day traders, speculators, and gold bugs (bless you!). Instead of most transactions being used for buying sandwiches, most transactions are about outcompeting investors on some trading thesis. And then fake transactions for fake competition around fake trading (bless the Internet!). So here's a quick segmentation of what I get even more excited about.

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On the vertical axis is the bit we already discussed, with the bottom part of the chart focused on capital gains. The horisontal axis plots private vs. public blockchains and some examples of local progress. So, for example, because trading in the trustless context became so appealing to so many, capital markets operating improvements were a natural blue ocean to explore. Firms like R3 quickly moved to set up permissioned chains in existing financial industries that follow established standards and protocols. If you want to see this on an even more massive scale, just check out the tidal wave of 500+ Chinese government and technology projects that use permissioned chains for global competition. Are they real blockchains? If that is your only concern, you are missing the game.

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Programmable blockchains -- not those representing just one asset, but those that can be used to write distributed software -- are the real game. I am biased to say that Ethereum is that programmable chain, because it can shift between public/private and investing/operating. Of course, it is not the only solution, and the careful thinker would appreciate the progress others are making in the space, particularly around infrastructure. But the way Binance dominates on users, Ethereum dominates on its core market, developers.

And yet, I am afraid that the risk of failure for winning this long game is high. If you are not focused on doing one thing well and having a major cash-flow engine, like the currency traders and the Bitcoin miners have to date, then there is no room for re-investment and expansion. This is why I think we will see the permissioned operators, who have cash-flow from existing industry consulting, and decentralized capital markets players, who have capital gains to spare, spend the next decade trying to move into the digital economy. The Chinese proprietary blockchain giants will power billions in business activity. Binance may become as widespread and adopted as WeChat or AliPay for digital wallets. It is much easier to win something from a base of users and revenue, than from smart, aesthetic ideas.

We have no shortage of beautiful, aesthetic ideas for decentralized economic activity. I am taken with this write-up by Centrifuge about how their technology could be extended to help businesses with supply chain financing, using MakerDAO. During the ICO boom, I had spent time with a Lithuanian business called Debitum Network, which approached the problem for invoice factoring from a digital lending perspective -- but they were saddled with a token economic framework that aged out of favor. Since then, decentralized finance approaches have dropped transaction tokens in favor of more open systems.

With Maker, today you collateralize a position with ETH, and receive an algorithmically dollar-pegged currency. Very soon, you will collateralize that same position with *whatever* and be able to get your dollar equivalent. This approach fits cashflow problems like a glove. Businesses in a supply chain often get quite differing payment terms (i.e., we will pay you in 30, 45, 90 days) while having to pay their own bills on yet another set of terms. To smooth things out, they will sell or finance these cashflows. In fact, one of the largest UK fintech startups, called Greensill, has raised $1.4 billion from SoftBank to solve problems around working capital that traditional banks are too slow to address.

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Another company to keep in mind is Taulia, which raised $170 million and powers working capital for 1.5 million businesses. I bring this up, because the folks behind Centrifuge have a background from Taulia and Greensill. Is it possible to stand up a decentralized working capital solution today? Technically, the elements are there. Special purpose vehicles from Centrifuge could be spun up quickly through a service like Vauban (disclosure, I am invested) and tied through software to Maker smart contracts. You then have a mix of real-world legal enforcement and blockchain-based programmability. But can we get the industry to opt in, and how? Can we do this before most small businesses even know how to operate a blockchain-based payments processor?

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Coming back to the analytical segmentation of the space, this is where permissioned chains may actually be helpful. Think about media piracy if you will -- I sure do. When you go onto Pirate Bay, a popular Bittorrent tracker (i.e., a distributed software for file sharing), there is a list of files you can click. Each file has Seeders, and Leechers. The Seeders already have the file, and are sharing it with the community. The Leechers are just downloading the file from the Seeders. The more people share, the faster the downloads go. Conversely, if you have very few Seeders for your very specific niche search, then your download may not go at all. This is, in some sense, a market with an intersection of supply and demand. In the decentralized world of Pirate Bay, some requests simply aren't possible because there is not enough supply. There are a lot more people interested in the Avengers than in Tron.

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Permissioned file sharing providers, like Netflix, Amazon, and HBO do not have this problem. There is no market clearing mechanism involved to support how fashionable some particular movie is today. Nobody needs to persuade the millions of nodes to host Tron, it is just available on those permissioned platforms -- as are the likely horrible spin-offs to come. As a comparison to the potential DeFi-based supply chain solutions, look at ConsenSys-built komgo, which is owned by the industry that uses it and is already in production today. This is why I think the digital economy path for blockchain use-cases must also be powered up by the private blockchain providers, and then made interoperable into the public ecosystem.

We need to move past day-trading. We need to bring over both retail and business users. We need to have operating cashflows. That's the real game for everyone in blockchain.


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Short Takes

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Looking for more?


Vince Caruso

New to The Street Founder

5 年

Deposits.com. Will be involved

Urs Bolt 博尔特

?????????????? ?????? ???? ?????????????????? ?????????????????? | Financial Mentor & Coach - Lecturer - Business Developer | Wealth Management - WealthTech - FinTech | Digital Assets Ecosystems | ???? ????

5 年

Thanks for sharing your deep thoughts Lex! Thought provoking and strategic! Are you also a chess player? ??

Lex,Would a marketplace for crypto assets work to speed up adoption?

April Rudin

CEO@The Rudin Group |Author at Wiley| Forbes Contributor| Board Member|UHNW Marketing Strategy - Wealth Management, Asset Management, Fintech +Wealthtech

5 年

Once again, this is an unbelievable roundup that I want to dig into especially American Banker podcast and the Nationwide news. Always interested in developments in #bitcoin as an asset class. Well-done. Thank you Lex!!

Lex Sokolin

Managing Partner @Generative Ventures | ex Consensys Chief Economist & CMO | Fintech, AI, Web3

5 年

In the long take this week, I look at the difference between (1) building out the crypto asset class, and (2) operating infrastruture for a blockchain-based digital economy.? There are so many little logic pot holes into which you could fall! There are so many things one could believe that make the whole thing make no sense at all!? I am anchoring around two primary data points -- a Multicoin report about Binance's financial progress and its massive (though unaudited) $180 million profit in Q3 of 2019, and a post by supply chain company Centrifuge about marrying cashflow financing with the decentralized web. Efi Pylarinou?Richard Turrin?April Rudin?Pascal Bouvier?Paolo Sironi?Linas Beliūnas?@Markus (Maex) Ament?Emmanuel M.?Didier Le Floch?Pete Casella?Kyle Samani

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