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In today's issue: Blockchains are businesses. Although we call them "protocols" or "projects," it's more helpful to think of blockchain and crypto as businesses. As investors, this allows us to analyze them like businesses, asking questions like, "How do these things make money? Are they profitable? How fast are they growing?" For crypto investors, understanding blockchain revenue is like understanding the business revenue. Today, we take a deep dive into how it all works, with a leaderboard of the best blockchain businesses (courtesy of Token Terminal). Read on. | |
Webcast: Byron Gilliam on What's Next in Crypto Thursday, October 27 at 6:30 pm ET | |
One of the best blockchain newsletters (besides this one) comes from Blockworks, where Byron Gilliam explains what's happening in crypto in a friendly, funny, easy-to-read format. We're thrilled to welcome him to this one-night-only online event where he'll give us deep insight into where crypto is headed in 2023. As part of our "user-friendly" series, we hope you'll join us for this entertaining, informative Q&A that will be accessible for everyone, no matter your level of crypto or blockchain knowledge. This online event is tomorrow Thursday, Oct 27 at 6:30 pm ET. It's free and open to all! RSVP here to get the online video link. | |
Blockchain Revenue: How Crypto Projects Make Money by Preetam Kaushik | |
Summary: Blockchains are businesses. As investors, this mental shift allows us to analyze them like businesses, asking fundamental questions like, "How do these things make money? Are they profitable? How fast are they growing?" Here's how to answer those questions. Blockchain has been heralded as one of the most transformative technologies of the 21st century. Its proponents cite security, privacy, and transparency as the reasons blockchain will overtake legacy technologies. These are all noble reasons, but at the end of the day, companies and investors in blockchain technology want to know one thing... "How does a blockchain project become profitable?" Thinking of blockchains like businesses lets us understand how they earn revenue and profits, where they're growing, and whether their business models are sustainable. Because these "businesses" are based on blockchain, the numbers are transparent for everyone to see. Here's how. The Blockchain Business Model Blockchain technology is a radical new business model that provides a new way of storing and managing data. The technology has great potential to disrupt any industry where database management is important especially when money is involved. While that’s been enough to attract investors up till now, long-term blockchain projects must also deliver profits. The prospect of income is what draws investors to projects, whether in the traditional stock and bond markets or in the new "block market." Take digital payments, for instance. Visa and Mastercard have thriving business models because they provide a valuable service. That service is a "settlement layer" that connects billions of merchants and customers, but these firms have centralized control over the data and payment records. They also make billions of dollars in annual profits from the fees they collect for using their networks. Compare this with crypto networks like Ethereum, a faster and often cheaper alternative to this settlement layer with a crucial promise to users. That promise is a neutral, decentralized platform where the parties involved in a transaction have equal access to data, but how much money is Ethereum making? | |
Best blockchain businesses (courtesy Token Terminal) Some of the best analyses of blockchain revenue come from Token Terminal where you can see leaderboards that summarize a few key data points as summarized in the table above. Fees: These are fees paid by people to use the protocol or network (gas fees on Ethereum, transaction fees on Uniswap, etc.) This is the standard way blockchain projects make money (think of fees like revenue). These fees are typically paid out in two ways (think of these like expenses): Supply-side: Most fees are given to the validators who help run a network (validators on Ethereum, liquidity providers on Uniswap, etc.). Token holders: Confusingly called "Revenue" in Token Terminal, this is the value that's returned to token holders (often by burning tokens, which increases the value of the pie for everyone else). Token incentives: Finally, we have new tokens that are created and paid to validators or miners. This is another type of expense as this reduces the value of everyone else's holdings. To read the chart above then, we might say, "Over the last 30 days, Ethereum earned $93.3 million in transaction fees. It burned $73.6 million in ETH tokens while creating $63.2 million in new ETH, creating net earnings of $10.4 million." These are not traditional earnings metrics, but they still reflect an understanding of how blockchains create value. How Blockchains Create Value Think of the "product" in any blockchain as the individual blocks that hold the transaction data. A company makes widgets and a blockchain makes blocks. If you want to complete a transaction on a blockchain network, you need to buy space on the next block in the chain. The product of a blockchain is a block. The simplest example is bitcoin. Bitcoin has a 1MB storage capacity per block. You get an average of 500 to a maximum of 2000 transactions in each block of bitcoin assuming a minimum data storage size of 258 bytes. To make a transaction in bitcoin, you're buying a block on the bitcoin blockchain. The Ethereum blockchain comes with additional features like smart contract programs. It has smaller blocks of up to 80KB storage capacity. Depending on the size and complexity of the transactions, an Ethereum block can hold anywhere from two to 200 transactions. Ethereum is significantly faster than bitcoin, accounting for 4MB of transactions in ten minutes, while the latter can only do 1MB. More transactions per hour mean the blockchain can generate more revenues (i.e., fees). If the chain can generate more revenues than it has expenses (i.e., payouts to people who run the network), this results in profit. The problem is blockchains are expensive to run as they have to focus heavily on network security. In proof of work blockchains like bitcoin, security is guaranteed through paying miners. In proof of stake blockchains, security is guaranteed through paying stakers and validators. In both mining and staking, those who provide security (i.e., run the network) receive rewards in the form of the project's native token. The more tokens issued, the more this dilutes the value of the token for everyone else. | |
As a proof of work blockchain, Ethereum paid out huge rewards to miners each quarter. As a poof of stake blockchain, this will change. (Image via Messari) At present, the income received by most blockchains through gas or transaction fees is not adequate to cover the expenses paid to miners or stakers to make it worth their time or to cover their energy bills. Projects built on top of existing blockchains face another issue. Most DeFi projects (like Uniswap, Aave, and Compound) attract users via incentives. These incentives come in the form of token emissions or minting new tokens to reward the users running the networks. As investors, we must ask the following questions: Revenue: How much in fees is the blockchain project earning? How are the fees earned? Expense: How much goes back to those who run the network? What other expenses must we consider? Token dilution: How many tokens are being created (or burned), thus decreasing (or increasing) the value for all other token holders? | |
Revenues vs. expenses: Ethereum fees (green line) vs. expenses paid to validators (blue line). Courtesy Token Terminal. | |
Revenues vs. profits: Ethereum fees (green line) vs. "profits" returned to ETH holders via burning (blue line). Courtesy Token Terminal. How to Create Blockchain Profitability To increase business profitability, you have two options: increase revenues and/or reduce costs. In blockchain businesses, this means: Create Cheaper Security Proof of work (mining) is too expensive. It's also energy-intensive and ecologically unsustainable. Instead, many newer blockchains use proof of stake. Instead of power-hungry computers brute-forcing math problems, investors can put up their crypto assets as "stakes" to validate transactions. Because staking is easier and cheaper than mining, the rewards paid out to stakers can be smaller. This translates into reduced costs for blockchain businesses. Create More Transactions The plight of the Ethereum blockchain in recent years highlights the importance of scaling for blockchain networks. Despite the high demand for transactions, the network is unable to capitalize on it due to inherent limitations in scalability. Since low transaction fees are unique selling propositions for blockchain networks, higher fees are not valid solutions. We’ve already seen this to be true for Ethereum, where gas fees that at times topped $100 per transaction did little to improve the profitability of the blockchain. The Ethereum network is in the process of a multi-year upgrade, which will increase the capacity from 30 to 100,000 transactions per second. This is expected to dramatically lower transaction fees, but the resulting increased number of transactions will more than offset this in terms of increased revenue. Reduce (or End) Token Incentives Blockchain projects can be considered tech startups, which famously use incentives to grow their business even if that means operating at a loss. As a comparison from the Web2 space, look at Amazon. It operated at a loss for six years after going public before finally delivering a modestly profitable year. Amazon’s incentive was its low prices and massive inventory, both of which came with high costs in the early years. Blockchain projects are now in this startup growth phase. However, in the coming years, the incentives being paid in the form of crypto tokens will need to come to an end to ensure the future profitability of said projects. Every token minted reduces the value of every other investor's holdings. It's like a pie that's continually growing larger while your slice stays the same. Conversely, every token that's burned makes the pie smaller, increasing the value for all investors. Investor Takeaway Blockchain is a disruptive technology with revolutionary potential, but we can't overlook profitability. This is essential to encourage its continued adoption across the economy. As investors, we look for projects that are profitable and likely to grow their revenue over the long term. In the last six months, the most profitable projects have been: OpenSea, the NFT exchange Metamask, the crypto wallet plugin Ethereum Name Service, the decentralized domain service 1inch, the DeFi/DEX aggregator MakerDAO, the creator of the DAI stablecoin Premium members can get access to our full library of research reports on profitable projects. | |
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Bitcoin Market Journal is a daily newsletter that makes you a better crypto investor. It is created by John Hargrave, Nick Marinoff, Steve Walters, Anatol Antonovici, Ben Burn, Danielle Greving, Preetam Kaushik, and Daniel Joel. Premium subscribers get full access to our top crypto picks. Both free and Premium subscribers get content to build them into better investors. Upgrade to Premium and become a Blockchain Believer! | | |
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