Bankless - State of the Nation #4 - HUNGRY (BUYING THE ETH NARRATIVE, $2B IN DEFI, AND THE DEFI VORTEX)
Episode Date: July 7, 2020STATE OF THE NATION #4 - Tuesday, July 7, 2020 The State of the Bankless Nation is....HUNGRY! The bankless boys discuss why. Plus a special guest...Luke Martin from VentureCoinist! Watch the video he...re. Covered: Is ETH a good narrative investment? What $2B locked in DeFi means The DeFi Vortex! ----- GO BANKLESS WITH THESE SPONSOR TOOLS: 💸 ARGENT - BEST ETHEREUM WALLET FOR GOING BANKLESS (we love it) - open one today! 🌈 AAVE - LEND & BORROW YOUR CRYPTO W/O A BANK - earn some interest! 💳 DEVERSIFI - DECENTRALIZED EXCHANGE FOR PRO TRADERS - use this exchange! 💸 AMPLFORTH - MONETARY EXPERIMENT FOR BASE MONEY - learn about this experiment! We show: 1) DeFi Pulse hits $2 billion! https://defipulse.com/ 2) The DeFi Vortex https://twitter.com/paulsalis/status/1278920299136741378 3) Ethereum's tech tree https://bankless.substack.com/p/ethereums-tree-of-life-market-monday-34c --- Episode Actions: 1) Look at $2B on DeFi pulse! https://defipulse.com/ 2) Think: what are the next crypto narratives? 3) Watch for David's article on Bankless tomorrow! https://bankless.substack.com/ Also...subscribe to Bankless YouTube to watch State of the Nation every Tuesday! ----- Don't stop at the show! Subscribe to the Bankless newsletter program http://bankless.substack.com/ Visit the official Bankless website for resources http://banklesshq.com/ Follow Bankless on Twitter https://twitter.com/BanklessHQ Follow Ryan on Twitter https://twitter.com/ryansadams Follow David on Twitter https://twitter.com/TrustlessState Follow DeFi Dad on Twitter https://twitter.com/DeFi_Dad ----- Not financial or tax advice. This channel is strictly educational and is not investment advice or a solicitation to buy or sell any assets or to make any financial decisions. This is not tax advice. Talk to your accountant. Do your own research. Disclosure. From time-to-time we may add links in this channel to products we use. We may receive commission if you make a purchase through one of these links. We'll always disclose when this is the case.
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Welcome, everyone, to episode four of State of the Nation.
State of the Nation is every Tuesday episode with David and I talk about what's happening.
We relate it to big picture stuff, the things that are going on in the bankless community,
in the bankless nation.
And we hope to drop some insights and action items every single week.
David, how are you doing, sir?
I'm doing absolutely fantastic, really stepping up the YouTube game with his brand,
new sexy graphics that you guys see on the screen. This is just a video recording, but soon it will
become a live stream. Really stepping up the bankless YouTube channel. David is now a certified video
DJ. At least he's going to night school for it. So we're excited to see his skills. And if it's a
little choppy, you know who to blame. Wow. I'm just kidding. I'm just getting. It's going to be
great. So okay, so every Tuesday we release this on YouTube and then it comes out on the podcast.
on Wednesday. And actually today, we are super excited to have a special guest. We're not going to tell you
who it is yet. We'll get to that in a few minutes, but I think you are going to be excited as well.
But David, we should talk about what's going on in the main podcast, too, because it's an exciting
month already. We just finished a podcast with Chris Berninski, which was absolutely fantastic.
What were your takeaways from that, sir? Yeah, recording that episode with Chris was just fantastic.
And I'm really glad that he allowed us to take a lot of time and go through diligently a lot of different topics because they all related to each other and they all deserved, you know, they all deserve their own time, right? And so Chris was really generous with us. He gave us like over an hour and a half just to go one by one through the various topics that have really surged in the Ethereum and Defi world. Going all the way back to like things like fairness and equity and the way that these digital nations,
are different from nation states and how that relates to liquidity mining and the comp token system
and the governance tokens, everything kind of stitched together really, really well.
So just fantastic conversation with Chris.
And we have a fantastic guest coming up next week as well.
Ryan, you want to tell us about that one?
Yeah, you know what?
So it's Vitalik.
Vitalik is one of those people who doesn't need a last name.
I guess he's sort of entered the Madonna phase of his fame.
But I am so excited to bring Vitalik on.
I've never actually, you've done a podcast with him, David,
but I've never actually talked to him or spoken to him.
So I'm incredibly excited.
The bankless community is already providing a ton of fodder for questions.
We are going to be Uber prepared for that.
I've got to be honest, I'm a little bit nervous about this one.
I don't know why.
It's just, I mean, it's Vitalik.
Is that normal?
I think when it all comes down to it,
you will find that it's actually very chill. Vitalik's like one of the most chill people that I know.
And so like people get like people, people think like it's like a massive big deal and everyone gets
nervous and about Vitalik and oh, there's Vitalik. And he doesn't think like that. And I don't think you
should either. He's a very chill individual. He is. Yeah. And you know, he definitely has an incredibly
interesting way of thinking. Just a funny story when I tweeted that out that we were having Vitalik on,
Vitalik obviously already knew about it, but that was sort of a reminder for him, and he pinged me.
And he said, oh, when's our podcast again? And I was like, I told him the date and time. And then he goes,
so in 46.5 hours. And I was like, exactly right. I whipped out the calculator. And then I was like,
yes, 46.5 hours, Vitalik. We'll see you then. You know, he just has an incredibly unique way of thinking.
and that's going to be an exciting podcast.
So he's counting down.
He's counting down until the podcast.
Maybe that's what he's doing.
He's preparing his 46-hour timer to count down.
All right, we've got a lot to cover.
Before we get into the topics,
we should talk about our fantastic new sponsors.
We have dedicated sponsors now for State of the Nation.
First time, David, can you talk about our first sponsor?
Yeah, our first sponsor is AVE,
which is just elegantly floating onto the screen right at this present moment.
AVE is a borrowing and lending protocol on Ethereum, except it's got cool extra gadgets, cool
extra mechanisms that you might not be used to with your typical borrowing and lending application.
The one that I'm really excited about is the stable interest loans, and so you can borrow from
AVE with an interest rate that won't change under your feet.
So that's a really important system, a really important protocol to leverage so you can have
stability in your financial life. We all love MakerDAO, but watching a 0.5% interest rate skyrocket
up to 20.5% interest rate in 12 months, that would have wrecked a lot of people if they had depended
on that for their personal life or their business, et cetera. And so that's something that you can do
on AVE. You can check them out at AVE.com. Awesome. And our second sponsor is Argent.
Which is also showing up right on the screen right now. A nice, nice job, David. You are just nailing it.
Well done. The night school is paying off.
So Argent is a bankless wallet.
This is one of my favorite wallets.
You know what?
It's my favorite mobile wallet in the DFI space.
I think it's the best, actually.
So you have easy access to ABE compound pool together, Khyber, token sets.
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your guardians on it. So there's social recovery. And they've got over $20 million locked inside of it
today. So this is a non-custodial way to go bankless. This is the ultimate bankless wallet. I think
Argent is definitely the future. You've got to go check them out. If you're doing anything in
defy and doing anything in the crypto space, check them out at argent.xy-Z.
we will include a link to both of these sponsors in the show notes.
David, my question for you, sir, is this.
What is the state of the nation today?
The state of the nation is hungry.
We are hungry.
Hungry, okay.
And this is exactly what we're going to get into with our special guest who is yet to be revealed.
Wait, wait, wait, wait.
How hungry are we?
Are we like hungry?
We've been intermittent fasting for like, you know, three days kind of hungry or like...
Yeah, that's right.
That's right.
We have not done the 72-hour complete fast, but we are intermittent fasting.
The tummy is grumbling.
But the thing is, like, we're also finding food, right?
So another thousand BTC just came to Ethereum.
Tether just in USDA continues to reach all times highs on Ethereum.
A lot of assets come into Ethereum, right?
Realty, by the way, passed $2 million in tokenized real estate on Ethereum.
And so, like, we're passing those milestones too, right?
So anybody that has assets, off-chain assets on Ethereum is reaching all-time highs on Ethereum, right?
Like find one protocol or system that puts assets on Ethereum that isn't at all-time highs, like right now.
And so the Ethereum ecosystem is sucking in assets, sucking in value.
And we're hungry for more.
We want more.
More.
For more assets?
You heard it there.
So-
For apples?
Assets.
Apples too.
more you reference.
All right.
So, yeah, but I don't think, I mean, you know, not hungry yet in a gluttonous way, right?
So we're not, we're not filling our plate yet.
There's at the all you can eat buffet.
There's a lot of room, I think, to grow.
There's a lot of room in the belly.
Is that the analogy we're going for?
So we'll talk about that today.
But the first topic we want to talk about, and this is where our special guest comes in,
is on the subject of Eith, the asset.
So we brought in Luke Martin.
He was kind enough to join us from Venture Coinist.
Luke is one of, I think, the most interesting narrative investors in the space.
He does a ton of trading, lots of other things, a great account to follow.
You've got to check out his full body of work.
But I put out a tweet recently that said this.
So as David was saying, Ethereum is hungry.
It's sucking in all of these assets.
And I said, I'm a fundamentals investor.
I don't dabble as much with narrative investing.
But if I was to put money on a narrative, it would be this.
Defy boom equals Eiff Moon.
What's good for DFI is good for Eith, the asset.
Nothing certain, but this seems like one of the most obvious narrative plays I've seen in crypto.
Again, I'm not a narrative investor as much.
I think a little bit more about kind of fundamentals,
though narrative investing is an incredible way to make.
gains in crypto, I will admit. I've seen Luke Martin talk about this and write about this previously.
So we thought we would bring him on to sort to sort of wait in on the subject. All right. So we brought
Luke in. Luke, how are you doing today, sir? Welcome to state of the nation. I'm doing well,
guys. Good to be here. I'm hungry as well. You guys are talking hungry. It's got me hungry,
hungry for breakfast. But I know a lot of people are hungry for yield and everything else. So a lot to talk
about. Yeah, and you know what else they're hungry about is narratives, because that can be a key way to
invest. I sort of glean this through my travels, but also through some commentary that I've heard
you say on the subject. And I sort of think that there's kind of three approaches one might take to
crypto. One is sort of a trader type approach, right, where you're looking at charts and you're trading.
The second is a narrative investor approach where you're looking at, hey, what's the next narrative we can
front run? And then jumping on that. And the third is,
fundamentals, you know, and some people, whatever fundamentals are in crypto, right? There's some
room for debate there, but those are the three ways of thinking about crypto. Yeah, so what are
your thoughts on the narrative side of things? You think this, like, we see the success of
defy, and that's pretty clear in Ethereum sucking in all these assets, but we're not seeing
ETH price rise. Is there a narrative here that exists and that we can front run, or do you think
it's just not going to happen.
See, this is a really interesting one.
Even you saying that the ETH price has not risen yet,
it's just been a muted rise,
especially when you compare it to how well some of these defy tokens have done,
right?
You look at Lend, you look at Thor, Comp,
and all these coins that have gone up many multiples
over the past few months.
ETH does look like it hasn't risen,
but if you go back to March, April, May,
ETH was one of the only majors that was rising.
You know, compare that to Tron or to Ripple or to Eos,
which have all kind of steadily.
gone down until about a week ago.
So I think we're just starting to see maybe a more mature, ETH.
It takes a lot more money to move an asset like ETH versus some of these smaller tokens,
which are now getting some traction, right?
I do think this defy narrative is a massive tail win for ETH.
I just think it's going to take maybe a little bit longer to get the kind of moves we're used
to in the past.
And how do narratives like these usually work, Luke, when you see them?
How do they kind of propagate and, you know, what's the, what's the art?
to this or what's the science and sort of predicting the next big thing?
I honestly focus a little bit less on predicting. And it's funny, you know, we've had so many
narratives. The narratives really never stop in crypto, you know, following the ICO boom,
when all the tokens kind of first came out when there was a token boom and new coins hitting
the market 24-7, there was a massive focus on coins that could scale Ethereum. And even if a
coin really wasn't focused on that or if the project didn't have too much merit, if it branded
itself, the scaling Ethereum, people were rushing to buy that coin.
And then we saw it with decentralized exchange coins.
We've seen it kind of over and over again.
We're seeing it right now with defy.
And the funny thing is you didn't even have to be early.
I mean, I've made one of my first defy trades, I think probably 30 days ago or a month ago.
And that's doing quite well.
And I wasn't early at all, right?
I was quite skeptical and kind of late to join on the train, but still doing okay.
Momentum and trends just dominate here in crypto when there is, even if fundamentals do play a role,
it's really hard to value how much the fundamentals should attribute to something's value.
So narratives and momentum and the trend really kind of dominate what's happening.
And the thing about, go ahead, David.
How much do you think that this is the fact that like, so we have this,
Ethereum is like this ecosystem, right?
And it has the market cap of ether, the asset,
but then it also has the value of all the other assets on the platform, right?
And so when all of these different defy tokens come into existence like Compton,
and then smack their way into a billion dollar valuation,
or you have things like lend, Aves token,
that does like, I don't know what, like 30x over like nine months or something.
So the market cap of all the tokens on Ethereum grows.
And so like part of the narrative,
I think is just the fact that ETH is just proximate to all of these things.
And so like maybe in a more concrete way,
like investors are speculating that the profits from all of these tokens
are going to just cycle back into ether.
But is that a narrative,
or is that actually something closer to fundamentals?
And how does that impact your decisions?
I think you could tie that to either.
I would say it's probably largely more a narrative,
just because if defy is the narrative, right,
is that defy is going to continue to compound,
this infrastructure is going to last,
more and more assets are going to continue to kind of be staked
and be used in this infrastructure,
that's the narrative.
and the narrative is that ETH will take off because of that.
I think you could also draw another relation and say,
if you're a large asset manager,
if you're a large investor,
even a high net worth individual that wants to invest in some of these things,
it's really hard to do,
especially unless you're deep in understanding how these things work,
you understand how wallets work,
you can navigate a decentralized exchange.
So really the only way to get exposure to some of these things
is to try to invest in the platform they're running on,
which is ETH.
So I imagine there's a pretty big handful of people
that see defy, see that that's bullish right now, see those tokens are doing well, and say,
how do I get involved? I'm just going to buy ETH, anticipating that that rises with this narrative
growing. I totally get your point earlier where you said, hey, look, the narrative actually is
positively impacting ETH the price. It's not, you know, it's appreciated relative to other layer one
assets like, you know, Tron or XRP or things like that. And I agree with that. That said, we haven't
yet seen the parabolic growth in ETH like we saw in 2017.
So when ETH's first use case kind of blew up, which was ICS, which I think of as
defy, right?
This is, you know, permissionless defy fundraising, if you will, that we didn't call it that
back then.
Heath absolutely exploded in price.
Someone at the same time.
Yet now we have defy assets kind of going parabolic and reaching almost similar levels
of hype.
Ridiculousness?
Yes, and ETH is not yet moving.
So I guess my question is,
do you think it's different this time?
Do you think that there's some reason for that?
Has the narrative just not sunk in enough?
Or are we looking at a dead narrative?
I think there's two key differences.
I think the first one is with ICOs,
you had to be buying ETH to participate.
It was the reserve currency
in order to participate in that ICO.
You were buying ETH.
You had to hold ETH to deploy it into the next ICO.
There weren't stable coins, right?
Sure.
Well, there were, but there wasn't that much of a focus on them.
And you definitely weren't depositing into the ICO with your stable coins.
It was very rare if an ICO accepted a stable coin or Bitcoin.
Very, very rare, right?
Like maybe one or two that I can think of.
So constantly having to buy ETH.
And then even after you sold that coin, you would have to reload your ETH to continue
participating in this ICO boom.
That's just not happening.
And I know that ETH does work with some of these infrastructures,
work with these systems, but you don't have to touch Heath if you don't want to.
I think that's one factor.
I think the other factor is the hype is incredible with this defy thing.
I think it's really the first meme and narrative that's taken a hold of the entire
crypto space, you know, even if you're a Bitcoiner and you don't like what's happening,
you still hear about this stuff 24-7.
And that's new.
So, but even kind of taking that into account, people outside of the crypto atmosphere,
crypto environment, I don't think they're as in tune with what's happening as they were with the
ICO boom. I don't think it's reached kind of mainstream hype the same way that ICOs did.
And partially maybe because it's harder to get involved. Like I said, it's a very steep learning
curve. If you want to get involved with lending or with yield farming or any of those things,
just to understand what's happening. And then to actually deploy assets into them is a way
bigger step than it was just with ICOs, one or two clicks. So I think those two things play a little
but maybe time kind of helps conquer both those.
Yeah, the nice thing with DeFi, of course, is that any asset can get involved.
So if you are really excited about Bitcoin the asset, you can start using Bitcoin on
Defi as WBTC or TBDC and some of these other derivatives.
So I think, hopefully it will draw some more attention and draw some more interest.
But back to this idea of like it feels to me a potential narrative is this.
for maybe institutions, maybe more classic investors who are like, I don't necessarily want to buy comp
token because that's complicated. But I want some sort of proxy to the value appreciation of
defy. And the meme of, well, ETH captures upside, like, defy tokens are like the SMP 500 of Ethereum,
and ETH captures the upside of that as the reserve asset of DFI.
It seems like that narrative, even if it's not, like, regardless of what you think of the
fundamentals or how true the reality is, that narrative could take hold on the, even the
institutional side, who can now, because ETH is a commodity, who can now start purchasing
ETH in a fairly, you know, regulatory, unburdened way.
what would it take for a narrative like that to sort of sink into the institutional side of things
and get more mainstream investors really excited?
I mean, I think it's already happening, right?
And like you said, whether they can't invest in comp because it's too risky or they don't understand it
or eth is just more liquid, right?
For a lot of investors, you know, Bitcoin and eth are the only options because those are the most liquid options.
So I think it's already taking hold if a crypto investor wants to be involved in this defy thing,
and can't do it in such a granular level and they want to be involved,
they're probably choosing the ETH route.
And it's probably going to continue as DFI picks up steam.
So I think that's only going to build on itself.
There's also a couple other narratives that I think could really help.
You know,
you see ADA right now doing quite well.
And the staking and the yield farming is only going to continue to pick up steam.
As ETH 2.0 and staking and all these things kind of combine,
they're really going to start to reinforce each other.
So I think the narratives can kind of combine in a way,
as people continue to look for yield as they get more comfortable finding assets that give yield in the
crypto space i think eth is going to play a pretty big role in all those things one thing that's pretty
interesting to me is that the eth 2.0 hype definitely impacted the 2017 ethereum
east price run up to like $1,400 and like i think we're around the same at least with what
we understood at in 2017 2018 Ethereum 2.0 was like right around the corner like it was perhaps
no more than 12 months away.
And now that's roughly still the same projected timeline.
But like that means like the hype of Ethereum 2.0 is theoretically right around the corner.
So like maybe we're kind of just waiting for these stars align with Ethereum 2.0
plus this whole new narrative ecosystem that we've been generating.
Yeah.
I mean, it's I remember when I first got into the space that was early 2017.
And I was reading about ETH 2.0 coming out.
So who knows when it comes out.
I'm sure Vatalic will, your next guest, we'll have a lot more to say about that
than I have any insight there.
But yeah, I think, you know, yield farming and staking,
we've seen clearly that people are chasing that trend.
And momentum tends to last year.
I try not to fight trends here because, you know,
fighting momentum in any asset class is tough.
Fighting it in crypto is pretty brutal.
So, you know, who knows?
I think as long as the ball keeps rolling with defy,
I think ETH is going to be a very nice benefactor of what's happening there.
So, Luke, you like yield farming, you like staking, you like defy.
Any other narratives that we should be watching out for for the folks that are tuning in and are interested in doing some narrative investing themselves?
I would say, ETH is probably the most interesting.
And I want to make a note, I find all those topics incredibly interesting.
But I learn a lot from you guys and people like Tony Shang and Andrew King.
I am trying to learn as much as I can.
I don't participate in some of the yield farming and all that.
It's still over my head, some of those things.
But I absolutely love when a narrative like this does take hold, and we are starting to see Eith and other assets.
benefit from that assets actually moving there. So I think that's going to be huge. I think
another thing to watch is if Bitcoin and the S&P, if this correlation actually does break down,
I think that's incredibly bullish. So it's going to be a fun time ahead and watching how
Eath develops through all this is top of my list of what I'm watching. Luke, it's been awesome to have
you. Thank you for taking the time for the bankless nation to share your thoughts on the narrative
side of things. Luke, how can folks find you and learn more about what you're up to? Definitely.
I appreciate you guys having me on.
I'm most active on Twitter at Venture Coinist,
or you can just search Luke Martin.
I'll be one of the first ones to pop up and on YouTube as well.
But Twitter's where I'm most active.
Awesome.
Luke, thank you so much.
We'll talk to you soon.
Appreciate it, guys.
Cheers.
Yeah, I think Luke's right on there, David.
You know, Eath is definitely one of the big narratives to watch.
How much do you personally partake in narrative investing versus, you know,
just stacking your ETH, stacking your Bitcoin?
The only thing that narratives really impact me is how aggressively I stack or not.
If there's perhaps less hype, less narratives, maybe I'll keep some more cash in my legacy world.
But if the hype definitely comes, like it has recently, I will definitely back up the truck as much as possible.
I've not ever been private on the fact that I generally hold as a minimum amount of cash in my bank account as possible because I want to live a bankless life.
And so when there's value there, it gets moved over to Ethereum.
Yeah, absolutely. All right. Our second topic, this goes back to, I think, the state of the nation being hungry. So we just passed another milestone. And that's $2 billion locked in DFI. I'm going to show it on the screen for everybody because I'm so excited about it. But David, what does all this mean?
I think also the right milestone is the fact that not only are we into $2 billion to DFI instead of the previous $1 billion,
where we were, but the speed at which it came, right? So it took us, you know, over a year and a half
to get to $1 billion in DFI, probably even longer than that. And it took us, what, like six months,
four months to get to $2 billion. And so the narrative is that, you know,
defy is going to be knocking down these billion dollar milestones faster and faster and faster.
And so like the next step, in my opinion, is not $3 billion. It's $10 billion. Three billion is going to come
tomorrow. 10 billion is going to take a little bit more time. But that's where we're going.
So you are saying basically D5Pulse should stop showing their graphs linearly and move to a log
logarithmic graph because this thing is going exponential. Well, I mean, look at it, right?
So the first one, two, three, four, five units lines, vertical lines that they have there are
the majority of the line is all under that first five million dollar mark. And then this last
two units or one and a half really it it crushes three three half billion dollar increments in the last like
month and a half so at some point like that the the linearness of a graph is not going to be able to tell you
good information yeah it looks like here it's it's interesting to kind of look back and see what the
rocket fuel was that that entire first segment here up until you know February or so seem to be
driven primarily by collateralized lending, right?
Sort of protocols like Maker.
Is Maker?
Not the king?
Maker is not the king.
Maker was the reigning king for a pretty long time.
And I think that was basically the first two years or so of growth that we've seen.
But now we see this very clear inflection point in around mid-June where Defy is taking off
yet again.
But this time, we know what the right.
Rocket Fuel is. We did that episode of Dan Ellitzer, and that's yield farming with comp tokens,
that sort of thing. So that seems to be the next wave. And sure enough, compound is now the
reigning king. So it seems like what's happening in the evolution of defy is we're going along
and then we hit some inflection point and then things shoot up. And then we hit another inflection
point, another breakthrough, and then things shoot up. It seems difficult to predict what the next
inflection point's going to be, right? Like, is it, first of all, I think we'll probably get a
really decent run on this yield farming stuff. But after that, what's next? Well, so I think a lot of,
you got it right, a lot of things are happening all at once here, right? And so yield farming and
liquidity mining isn't really just one thing, right? And so it's what that thing is, is really just,
just it broke the floor of what is possible on Ethereum. And it and when I say broke the floor,
I mean like the gravity well that is Ethereum is now deeper, right? It's now stronger. There's
more assets on Ethereum. It broke the floor of Ethereum as in like it there's so many more and more
different assets coming to Ethereum. Like Bitcoin on Ethereum is at its all time highs.
And stable coins on Ethereum are at its all time high. And stable coins on Ethereum are at its all time high.
And like I said earlier, like realty tokenized real estate is on Ethereum at an all time high.
Right.
And so like it's liquidity mining just allowed for the gravitational pull of Ethereum to become a lot stronger.
Right.
And so all assets are coming into Ethereum from all different corners because the gravity well, that is defy, that is one single composed Ethereum structure of applications.
It's just more useful for all of these assets, right.
That I think brings us to the third topic, David.
and I'm going to show this image, this graphic on the screen in a minute, but that is this image
of Defi as a vortex. You're talking about the gravity well. I mean, you could use a black hole
as an analogy or image. This is really a vortex type of image, so almost like a hurricane on the
screen that you're seeing. Can you talk a little bit about this? Yeah, right? So this is a fantastic
graphic. And when I wrote this, that article, Ethereum is an emergent structure way back when. And when I saw
this graphic, I was like, this is what that is illustrating. Right. So the whole thesis about Ethereum as an
emergent structure is that all these applications on Ethereum are composed themselves together.
That's really the power of Ethereum is composability. Right. And so this vortex, what this
vortex is showing is that the liquidity gadgets like balancer uniswap and curve are directly
related to the payments and aggregators and exchanges like Khyber one inch and DYDX,
which is really connected, just intrinsically connected to the borrowing and lending applications
like compound and AVE, which is intrinsically running on the demand for various assets on
Ethereum like that come from Maker, Dow, Synthetics, and UMA and Set. And then those applications
run on the liquidity pool. So we're back at the very beginning. And so this ecosystem, this one
single composed structure offers incentives to place your assets there. Assets in this vortex are more
useful, are greater, are stronger, are more valuable. It's more valuable to have your assets
inside of this vortex, right? And so wherever value is coming from outside of Ethereum into Ethereum,
it's getting funneled into this vortex because you are able to leverage the value inside of
those assets better. And so as it sucks those assets in, it also grows larger.
Right, because liquidity begets liquidity.
Utility begets utility.
Things beget things.
Like, it's a place of begetting.
Yeah.
And so, you know, someone was asking the question,
where's Ethereum in this vortex, right?
So there's the D5 vortex in the center,
but there's no Ethereum.
Where's Ethereum?
The whole thing is Ethereum.
Like, right?
The Ethereum is the substrate.
Ethereum is this, it's the background, right?
And that's one of the beauty.
about ether and Ethereum is like the whole principle, the whole ethos of this system is that you can
operate in the Ethereum operates in the background. It is in the ether, right? It is not in your face.
And it's one of the core differences between Bitcoin and Ethereum, right? Bitcoin is designed to be
in your face. You're supposed to think in Satoshi's. You're supposed to think in Bitcoins,
denominate yourself in Bitcoin assets. And Ethereum is the opposite. It's right,
like you can use and leverage Ethereum without having to think about Ethereum, the network or
ether the asset because those things operate in the background. And so what is, you can just rename
D5 vortex and you can basically just label that Ethereum. That's what it is. It also, not to break
that analogy, because I like it, but it also makes me wonder, and this is kind of a question I have
for Vitalik, right? We are very bullish on the defy system as a bankless money system and it's being
a primary use case for crypto. It's not necessarily the only use case for Ethereum. Vitalik makes that
point too. So it's possible you could have like, you know, on the planet of Jupiter, how you have
all of these swirling clouds, these swirling vortexes, and you have the red spot, which is the
largest of the vortexes. But then you have all of these other smaller hurricanes that are happening in
parallel. I do wonder if other vortexes will emerge that aren't defy on Ethereum as well.
I haven't necessarily seen that yet.
Most of the use cases have been tied to finance and money.
But it is an interesting question because this is really a general purpose settlement system,
property settlement system for the world.
And it's hard to imagine what the next use cases might be.
I mean, I think that's the beauty of it, right?
Absolutely.
And I think the, I think the D5 vortex in this,
image here. I think there's a theory that I have that this is also the L1 vortex, right?
This is where all of the big applications, the tools that support everything else on Ethereum
rely on. Right. And so not only are we going to see certain transactions be on L1 or on L2,
but we're going to also see certain applications be on L1 and on L2, right? Like I predict that
compound and maker and are going to be perpetually L1 applications.
And then some exchanges, perhaps, like uniswap, we see experiments on L2 balance or on L2.
Like the difference between L1 and L2 is that they're big, heavyweight applications.
And the L2, each L2 is its own ecosystem, right?
And so there can be L2 vortexes that build off of the L1 vortex, right?
And so I think what we are showing here is the stitching together of all the different financial activity.
but because it's all happening at the same time,
that's why gas prices are so insane right now.
And we've seen this insane emergence of L2 systems
be developed and released in the last six months.
I think we're going to start to see some mini vortexes
spiraling off of this one big vortex.
Yeah, absolutely.
And that reminds me, David.
We should talk about our sponsors for a minute.
All right.
So we are super excited to have Diversify as a sponsor.
Diversify is one of the vortex.
Texas that David was just talking about. This is a professional grade defy exchange, a decentralized
exchange. So it's completely self-custodial. It's built for serious traders. It's high speed.
It's low fee. It's private and it's deeply liquid. 9,000, excuse me, transactions per second.
So that's instant execution and low fees. My question to you is, why use a centralized exchange?
We are starting to build out exchanges like Diversify in the DFI space, and you should check them out.
They also have a governance token called Nectar.
That's NEC.
You should check it out.
It powers their Dow.
It currently has over 400 ETH inside of it, and a lot more ETH pledged.
It's a perpetually deflationary token as well.
So they have a buyback and burn scheme.
And these guys with Neck, Diversify, was one of the original,
liquidity miners back in the day. They were liquidity mining before it was cool. So check out what
they're doing on their governance token neck. Also check out Diversify, start using it as an exchange.
Go to Diversify.com. We will include a link in the show notes. We have a new sponsor called
Amplforth, which is also a new experiment on Ethereum. And so this is going to be a different,
it's a different category than other other sponsors. Because this is a brand new, a brand new
And so it's a new monetary experiment.
It's like trying to be a new M0.
Except the way that it's different is that it's instead of having a variable price,
it's a stable-ish coin.
It's supposed to track a dollar, but when demand for this token grows,
instead of the price going up, the supply goes up.
And so it gives you supply discovery instead of price discovery.
And so Amples, the currency of the Ample system is a new base money experiment,
and it's very rules-based and like Bitcoin, it's very non-dilutive.
So with a $20 million market cap, if you buy one million of them,
you have the assurances that you are going to own one, one-120th of the supply,
but you don't have assurances of what that supply is going to be.
So like crazy experiment, I'm excited to watch this play out.
So you can take part in the ample liquidity mining with the geyser at gyser.
At gyser.ampleforth.org, part of the health.
of the Ampleforth ecosystem needs to have distribution.
And so if you are interested in helping ample distribute,
you can go to geyser.ampleforth.org and check them out
and get your hands on some ample via the liquidity mining that we all know and love.
All right, David, this is last topic.
It kind of ties into the vortex that we were just talking about.
When you were talking about the vortex,
it made me think about the tech trees I used to play, like games I used to play.
Do you ever play games like Civilization where it's, you know, an RTS or turn-based strategy
types of games?
There's always in those games.
There's always this tech tree component that your civilization has to discover.
If your character in an RPG, you kind of have to level up using some sort of tech tree
or skill tree.
So like in civilization, you know, first comes the alphabet and then you need to discover the alphabet
before you can discover writing and code of laws and that leads to literacy and that eventually leads
to a republic and then you can get nukes and you protect yourself from Gandhi who's definitely
going to attack you. That's a quirk of the game and nothing against Gandhi in real life.
So but that's that you're a great guy. So that's sort of what's happening with a thing.
Ethereum right now is there is a tech tree being built out. This is a tech tree, which is kind of
sketched out on bankless that looks at sort of the launch area where we started with ETH, and then we
started with this very basic primitive that we discovered, we created, but also discovered, called
the ERC20. And that led to the birth of ICOs. And that was sort of the first phase of unlocking
in the tech tree. But once we had tokens, then
we could start creating something else. And we entered into this kind of collateral era
where we're starting to create things like lending protocols like compound and staple coin
protocols like Maker and also trading protocols like Uniswap. And then once we unlock all of those,
we can then start to unlock other things like the die savings rate, which is basically
kind of a savings account for your die. And then once we have that, we can start to unlock
other things like the Argent wallet, which is new.
Argent wallet wouldn't be very interesting
if all of these other primitives in the tech tree
haven't been built out.
It's only possible in year like three or four of Ethereum
would not have been possible in year one.
So we keep going through the tech tree
as an Ethereum civilization, as a bankless nation.
We keep unlocking things as we go and discovering new things.
And then a whole new world of possibilities opens us.
Like who would have known that, you know, the invention of writing would lead to, you know, landing a man on the moon, right?
But we had to have writing in order to get us way downstream in the tech tree.
And that's sort of what I see evolving on Ethereum.
Yeah, there's a classic line in the crypto space that the crypto world is relearning the lessons of economic and financial history just sped up.
And that's what I see here, right?
Like the ERC token is a symbol of value.
And then you have the store of value, ETH.
And then we have all just the, we have credit coming out of the maker system.
We have bundles of assets coming out of set.
And that's what I see.
We are relearning the progress of history on Ethereum.
And what I'm really excited for is seeing when we actually start to break through the frontier into brand new things.
And perhaps that's what liquidity mining and defy tokens have been in this last new phase.
And what really gets me excited is the compounding rate of progress that you get with this, right?
So, and at the very beginning, in your launch era that you have highlighted, there's only a few things that are really crucial.
And then in the next area, there's a lot more things because the building blocks compound.
And so in the world of Ethereum, the more protocols there are on Ethereum, the more die, the more uniswap, the more whatever, compound Ave Maker.
like the more things, the more potential there are for more things.
And so that's why developers are so important, right?
Compounding progress leads to compounding developers, which leads to compounding progress, right?
And so I think with this turn of the page that Ethereum has really seemed to have taken lately,
we're about to see a lot of compounding progress on Ethereum.
Absolutely.
I want to go back to that phrase that Chris Berninski used in our podcast with him,
and he called this infinite white space.
And I don't know if he's been influenced by bankless, but he talked an awful lot about the journey West and how there was not opportunity on the East Coast.
We did.
Yeah.
And how pioneers and people who are looking for new opportunities who predominantly were younger or outcasts, not part of the existing social structure, found their opportunity west.
That's what this is.
we are building an entire crypto nation, an entire crypto economy, and there's infinite white
space. We have no idea what's going to be unlocked next. But once something's unlocked,
there's dozens of protocols that can be built on top of it, hundreds of businesses that can be
on top of it, ways to earn money. The opportunity is here. And I think it's only a matter of time
before millennials and Gen Z. This is definitely going to be a Gen Z type of,
platform. So at some stage, Dave, you and I will have to pass the torch to the next generation
to keep carrying us. But like this is where the opportunity is. Not in the nation states
anymore. If they're squeezing that out, we've got opportunity in this infinite white space
as we unlock each branch of the tech tree. Yeah. And one last thing to wrap up this conversation is
that when new protocols come to Ethereum, they make the older protocols better, right? And so the
there we go, when new protocols come on to Ethereum, the old protocols that were their previous
can tap into this new system, right? So like the oldest protocols on Ethereum like Auger are now
benefiting from systems like die in zero X, which came after them, right? And so like compounding progress
also works retroactively, right? And so that's why I always say that defy and Ethereum is this
one single composed structure of financial possibility, right? Because everything relates to everything else.
there's no there's very few things that are disconnected from ethereum at large right any progress in
one domain is progress in all domains absolutely uh david you did a fantastic job today we're going to
wrap it up here but i just want to say you did a great job video DJing man he's it's just you blew
me away it's great i i appreciate that man uh but uh let's hope that it actually works because i
haven't seen it when it when it plays but uh we'll see what happens all right well if if it works
We should do this every week.
I think we will do it every week.
Bankless nation.
Yeah, exactly.
Bankless nation, you know, not a ton by way of action items.
But one thing we'd like you to do is we'll include a link to the Twitter thread with Vitalik, where we ask, what questions do you have for Vitalik?
We'd love to tee up some good questions from the bankless community for that.
The other thing you can do is think about the next crypto narratives.
If you want to dabble a little bit in narrative investing,
take a look at what Luke is doing and think a little bit about what the next crypto narratives might be, put your list together.
We definitely advise that you have a stronger fundamentals-based portfolio,
but narrative investing can be an interesting way in crypto to produce yields as well.
That is it from us.
Thanks a lot for tuning in.
This has been State of the Nation episode four.
Hang on, I'm going to do a little self-shrill real quick.
I got an article coming out in Bankless Tomorrow
that talks a lot about what we have been talking about in this episode.
It's titled Global Public Goods and the Protocol Sink.
It definitely relates to how all protocols impact each other.
And also, it talks about what is at the very bottom of the gravity well?
That defy liquidity vortex, what's at the bottom?
And that article answers that question.
So that's coming out on bankless tomorrow, so stay tuned for that.
I want to find out what's at the bottom.
What's at the bottom?
All right.
Thanks a lot.
