The Good Tech Companies - Finance from First Principles
Episode Date: August 28, 2024This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/finance-from-first-principles. Explore the evolution of financial markets from Finance 0.0 t...o 3.0, the rise of DeFi, and the challenges of replacing traditional finance with blockchain-based Check more stories related to finance at: https://hackernoon.com/c/finance. You can also check exclusive content about #financial-markets, #global-economy, #ipo, #tradfi-vs-defi, #future-of-finance, #initial-defi-offering, #blockchain-and-finance, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @chateaucapital. Learn more about this writer by checking @chateaucapital's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Financial markets at the heart of the global economy are most commonly associated with speculation. Entrepreneurs and investors use capital markets to finance their firms. Efficient markets lead to very real outcomes such as jobs being created, unicorns being built, and GPs earning carry. Self custodial, peer-to-peer paradigms of crypto-networks fundamentally disintermediates most rent seeking middlemen institutions.
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Finance from first principles, by Chateau Capital.
Greater than physics is the law. Everything else is a recommendation
greater than greater than greater than Elon Musk. The right to transact is pre-government.
A hunter-gatherer in the Amazon does not have to submit a reggae offering when
he shares the future expectation of his profitable hunt with his tribe. Native Americans did not consult the SEC, CFTC, or FTC before selling the island of Manhattan to
the Dutch. Financial markets at the heart of the global economy are most commonly associated with
speculation, but its most important yet overlooked function is that of capital formation.
Entrepreneurs and investors use capital markets to finance their
firms. Investors and institutions rely on capital markets to capture opportunities.
Efficient markets lead to very real outcomes such as jobs being created,
unicorns being built, and GPs earning carry. Throughout history, the evolution of financial
markets can broadly be demarcated by its technological medium. The change from one
generation to another is marked be stepwise improvements in faster speed of transactions,
cheaper cost of distribution, and broader access to markets. Finance 0.0. You trade wheat for some
of your neighbor's upcoming barley harvest and record the unregistered futures transaction on
a clay tablet. Finance 1.0. You trade spices
for guilders to FOMO illegal security certificate offerings in the unregistered Dutch East India
trading company. Finance 2.0. You log into eTrade to YOLO your life savings in the dot-com bubble.
Finance 3.0. You trade tokenized assets on-chain with instant finality. In every other sector of the
modern economy, newer, better, and faster technology stacks tend to get adopted rapidly.
So one has to ask, why hasn't stepwise improvements in finance gained widespread adoption
for the past two centuries as financial markets evolved from finance 1.0 to finance 2.0?
Large institutions, investment banks, broker-dealers,
prime brokers, transfer agents, custodians, and investors all evolved into specific roles within
the broader financial system within tight parameters determined by financial regulations.
Finance 3.0 throws a wrench into the existing system. Self-custodial, peer-to-peer paradigms of
crypto networks fundamentally disintermediates most rent-seeking middlemen institutions that
currently dominate the market. From that perspective, most of institutional resistance
to finance 3.0 has to do with fundamental changes which would make much of the existing
financial infrastructure obsolete. I won't belabor the deeper issue of regulatory capture.
Many of the existing US security regulations, such as Rule 144, purportedly exist to protect investors yet are outright nonsensical if examined from common sense. The most cited
Supreme Court ruling on the matter of securities especially as it pertains to crypto, the Howey
Test, from SEC vs W.J. Howey Company, was made in 1946. Howey sold
land with the promise of a future profitable orange orchard enterprise contingent on his
efforts. The Supreme Court ruled such an arrangement constituted an investment contract,
and the judgment has been cited since. How is this relevant, one might ask, how does a contract
made on some old orange orchard relate
to magic internet money trading on global blockchains? No one else seems to know either.
But the current system has created an oligopoly that writes checks that pay for lobbyists in DC.
Bear in mind, that 1946 predates the transistor and much of what we consider to be modernity.
The judges of Howie had no conception of the internet
much less tokenized abstractions of value that can be sent across the globe instantly without
an intermediary written code that can be programmatically composed with more software
for leverage rehypothecation and more use cases would have a seemed magical but by the principle
of stare decisis all somewhat remotely financial software in the u.s even if it's in the principle of stare decisis, all somewhat remotely financial software in the US,
even if it's in the form of JPEGs and magic internet coins, need to comply with said law written 78 years ago, or face the wrath of some bureaucrat asked with protecting yours truly from
the danger of putting $50 in Harry Potter Obamasonic 10 Inu. I feel safer already.
Initial Public Offering, IPO, vs. Initial DeFi, IPO, versus initial DeFi offering, ETO. The US IPO market
was $26.8 billion in 2023, with the largest and most notable listing being Arm Holdings at $5.
$2 billion market cap, at the time of writing, Dimension, http://dimension.xyZ, a Cosmos-based startup offering rollups as a service,
has an airdrop token $DYM trading at $6 billion FDV, fully diluted value. How is a $DYM,
a token for a startup whose software has but a couple dozen users, valued more than armholdings,
at least on paper? The answer is crypto-speculative premium. With crypto lacking in market depth and
liquidity compared to traditional venues, pumping and dumping tokens is infinitely easier.
Yet historically, for organizations looking to raise large amounts of capital,
seven figures plus, there was no better legal alternative until very recently.
DeFi mechanisms only recently matured sufficiently to handle multiple types of transactions.
If one examines both offering methods from first principles, which is from the perspective of the
customer, then these two asset distribution methods are functionally equivalent, albeit
with different methods both enable capital formation for their respective issuers.
Both distribute stakes in a company to an audience in a manner conducive to secondary trading.
Both enable price discovery, trading, and rehypothecation, albeit by different means.
Solving real problems, the fundamental value proposition of markets is to facilitate transactions between buyers and sellers. The fundamental value proposition of DeFi
markets is that it can do so cheaper, faster with more programmatic flexibility than
any existing alternative. Key advantages of DeFi over TradFi 1. Speed of execution and settlement.
In private markets, firms and financial managers spend weeks if not months circulating PPMs to
raise funds and financing for their projects. OTC, secondary, private market assets take much
longer to transact than your typical public
security. Traditional security offerings settle T plus N on exchanges and dark pools,
with opaque backend transfers between broker-dealer and custodians.
VS Next block settlement for all digital assets, yet every day, hundreds if not thousands of new
tokens, go public, on-chain to reach hundreds of millions in market cap.
What would take months with traditional fundraising has now been reduced to a few lines of code.
2. Cost. Companies that intend to go public will need to pay accountants,
auditors and investment banks millions of dollars in fees to conduct an IPO roadshow.
Even private tenders cost upwards of five figures for legal fees.
N.N. Arm Holdings paid millions of dollars to lawyers,
auditors and investment banks to conduct its initial public offering.
NNVS NNDYM had software engineers and audit costs prior to their token distribution,
which was free.
3. Uptime TradFi Brokers have 9-5 business hours.
NNVS Nblockchains and internet native capital markets
run 24 July 365. 4. Fractional investment DeFi tokens are typically fractional,
which means you can buy 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 2, 3 of a token. NNVSNN traditional markets,
especially illiquid instruments typically require 6 to 7
figure check sizes. 5. Access and distribution
Traditional markets require a broker, dealer. Private markets require knowing the right parties,
private brokers. N.N.V.S.N.N. Anyone in the world with access to a crypto on ramp can participate
in DeFi. Icos, IDOs, LBPs already raise millions daily.
Their cap table spans the entire internet. 6. Composable with more DeFi apps
Traditional securities exists as a data entry in a Fortran database on a custodian's back end.
N, NVS, N, N DeFi tokens are programmatic entities that can be extended with unlimited use cases.
That's not
to say DeFi in its current form doesn't come with an entire list of flaws. Shortcomings of the
current state of DeFi. 1. Lacking in legal recourse and oversight. DeFi tokens generally
lack legal recourse and protections traditional securities offer investors. As a result, crypto
is rife scams, frauds, and implosions. Investors who lose their
money typically lack any kind of clawback mechanism. All this can be safeguarded with
proper due diligence, but the inherent risks deter unsophisticated investors.
2. Complex tokenomics obscure true risks. Crypto projects trend towards over-engineered
designs that obscure true risks associated with
a product. The most infamous being Luna's anchor marketing its algorithmic stablecoin 1UST equals
1USD. Clearly, transparent disclosures around battle-tested frameworks should be practiced.
3. Smart contract and self-custodial risk contracts and wallets can get hacked.
Self-custody is vulnerable to phishing and other idiosyncratic risks. N, N that users need to worry about these factors limit the potential
user base to sophisticated, technically literate people. Yet in spite of its many shortcomings,
DeFi offers something modern finance cannot. Internet native capital formation to a global
audience at crypto speeds. In finance 3.0, everyone on earth can be an
issuer, and everyone else can be an investor. The entire universe of financial assets,
from equities, to debt, corporate bonds, to derivatives like futures, options, exotics,
credit default swaps, collateralized debt obligations etc., can all live on-chain,
be traded 24-7 and composed infinitely.
The technological potential is clear. What's currently lacking is infrastructure and
frameworks that allow everyone to do this in a safe manner. DeFi needs its native set of best
practices, tools and compliance framework. Where can we start? What would a modern financial system
look like if designed from first principles, replacing traditional finance greater than in order to be successful,
an idea has to be 10x better than what already greater than exists.
Greater than greater than greater than Elon Musk and Peter Thiel DeFi user experience is
often lampooned for being absolutely terrible, and rightly so. Yet key changes are on the horizon
that will enable DeFi UX as seamless as traditional Web2 brokerages such as Interactive Brokers, Robinhood or Vanguard.
Account A B S T R A C T I O N A A frameworks such as Web3Auth,
Byconomy or Arcana enable social or email logins, gas sponsorship, and single session signatures.
These features bring DeFi app experiences up to par with Web2.
Chain abstraction We are a few years away from chains being a banality.
From the perspective of UX, it should not matter which chain an item is on.
Chain abstraction would enable traders and apps to focus on the execution of a transaction,
instead of which chain, what gas, and what bridge.
Inching towards common sense DeFi legal FRAMEWORKSA share,
traditionally represented as a stock certificate, is an abstraction of value.
There is no difference practically and conceptually between a DeFi token and a
security that exists on some prime broker's database, except in legal distinction.
To gain widespread adoption, DeFi requires common-sense legal frameworks built upon
first principles instead of force-fitting traditional security laws onto tokens.
Some of my personal suggestions. 1. Recognize DeFi tokens as shares or legal claims,
or currency where applicable. Forward-thinking jurisdictions already take this stance,
including but not limited to. 1. Dubai VARA.
2. Bermuda VASP. 3. Hong Kong NN. this stance including but not limited to one dubai vara two bermuda vasp three hong kong n n
two recognize smart contracts as legally binding issuance trading and settlement mechanisms
backslash dot three recognize daos and blockchain native organizations part of what made silicon
valley a startup mecca was the ease of which anyone can spin up a Delaware C Corp and receive safes from VC investors. As we build the internet-native financial system,
we should aspire to replicate corporate laws in a defy-native manner.
N.N. The Blockchain LLC, or the Internet C Corp. Entities tied to a smart contract,
multisig wallet that's tied to a national registry create a company and start
accepting stable coins in five minutes backslash dot four create a new definition of crypto asset
distinct from current concepts of security backslash dot five fiat integration allow banks
and financial instruments to use and hold crypto assets def DeFi as recognized assets on their balance sheet.
NN recognized DeFi protocols as legitimate businesses.
Backslash dot.
6. Room for experimentation allow room for innovative models to emerge.
While many of you have been anticipating crypto adoption for the past 10 years,
I am less optimistic. Change comes one funeral at a time. The from finance 2 0 to finance 3 0 most likely
requires a generational change of guard at all levels of society yes to put it bluntly the
retirement of the current generation of lawmakers is a fundamental prerequisite for mainstream crypto
adoption info written by how jun tan chateato Protocol CEO. Thank you for listening to this Hackernoon story, read by Artificial Intelligence.
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