The Wolf Of All Streets - Unlocking Trillions: Sergey Nazarov On Tokenizing Real World Assets & The White House Crypto Summit
Episode Date: March 16, 2025We're diving into an exclusive conversation on The Wolf Of All Streets podcast with Sergey Nazarov, co-founder of Chainlink, who was invited to the groundbreaking White House Digital Asset Summit. Ser...gey reveals how blockchain technology will radically transform the government, financial institutions, and everyday life. Join us to understand why the U.S. is pivoting towards blockchain and why Chainlink is set to power the future. Sergey Nazarov: https://x.com/SergeyNazarov ►► JOIN THE FREE WOLF DEN NEWSLETTER, DELIVERED EVERY WEEKDAY! 👉https://thewolfden.substack.com/ 🔥 𝗟𝗕𝗔𝗡𝗞 𝗘𝗫𝗖𝗛𝗔𝗡𝗚𝗘 - 𝗡𝗢 𝗞𝗬𝗖 𝗥𝗘𝗤𝗨𝗜𝗥𝗘𝗗! 𝗖𝗟𝗔𝗜𝗠 𝗨𝗣 𝗧𝗢 𝟱𝟬% 𝗧𝗥𝗔𝗗𝗜𝗡𝗚 𝗕𝗢𝗡𝗨𝗦! Join today & get rewarded! Start trading to claim up to 50% in trading bonuses!! 👉https://www.lbank.com/activity/ScottMelker-Cashback?icode=4M3HD ►► Arch Public Unleash algorithmic trading. Discover how algorithms used by hedge-funds are now accessible to traders looking for unparalleled insights and opportunities! 👉https://archpublic.com/ ►►TRADING ALPHA READY TO TRADE LIKE THE PROS? THE BEST TRADERS IN CRYPTO ARE RELYING ON THESE INDICATORS TO MAKE TRADES. Use code '10OFF' for a 10% discount. 👉https://tradingalpha.io/?via=scottmelker Follow Scott Melker: Twitter: https://x.com/scottmelker Web: https://www.thewolfofallstreets.com/ Spotify: https://spoti.fi/30N5FDe Apple podcast: https://apple.co/3FASB2c #Bitcoin #Crypto #chainlink Timecodes 0:00 Intro 0:29 White House Summit Insights 2:45 US Crypto Turning Positive 5:17 Trump's Bitcoin Support 8:49 Three Key Topics 11:49 Chainlink’s Major Role 15:00 Automating Compliance Explained 18:05 Blockchain Changing Biggest Businesses 21:20 Understanding Oracles Simply 24:59 Who Tokenizes Government Assets 27:24 Blockchain Beyond Financial Uses 30:12 Solving Trust in Voting 33:41 Government Adoption Like Microsoft 35:36 U.S. Becoming Blockchain Leader 38:25 Banks, DeFi & Tokenization 44:06 Legal Clarity & Floodgates 48:37 ETFs Unlock Institutional Demand 51:11 Chainlink’s Infrastructure Reliability 54:59 Blockchain Adoption in 5 Years The views and opinions expressed here are solely my own and should in no way be interpreted as financial advice. This video was created for entertainment. Every investment and trading move involves risk. You should conduct your own research when making a decision. I am not a financial advisor. Nothing contained in this video constitutes or shall be construed as an offering of financial instruments or as investment advice or recommendations of an investment strategy or whether or not to "Buy," "Sell," or "Hold" an investment.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
One mode of thought is, let's make a very attractive environment for teams in the United States.
Because PayPal doesn't know how it works legally. They can't let you. They want to let you.
They want to give you that user experience.
Or same thing with Robinhood, or same thing with JP Morgan, same thing with whoever.
If you want to work with the government in any way, shape, or form, or interact,
then you need to be using Microsoft Word or Excel spreadsheet or whatever it is.
You have to deal with them.
They're the government being part of the United States.
That's what success looks like.
The White House Digital Asset Summit was a pivotal moment in the crypto industry when Donald Trump and the heads of multiple agencies sat down with the most brilliant minds in the crypto industry. One of those brilliant minds is my guest today, Sergey
Nazarov, the co-founder of Chainlink, which is the Oracle
and infrastructure underlying almost everything that's
happening in blockchain today.
We had an incredible, powerful conversation about why blockchain
is so important, how it will power the future and how it will
be used by governments, institutions and retail alike.
You do not want to miss this incredible conversation with Sergey Nazarov.
So you were one of the fortunate few who was invited to the White House Digital Asset Summit
in Washington, D.C. last week.
You actually had the opportunity to speak to the president, which was incredible.
It's almost surreal seeing all of you sit at that table, to be quite honest, especially
considering the environment for crypto in this industry in the United States.
First, what was it like to be in that room? Yeah, it was pretty amazing. I think surreal
might in some ways be an accurate term if you think about where everything was even three to
four months ago before President Trump won the election. So I think it's a massive, massive shift.
It's a very good example of how quickly the United States can adapt when it wants to adapt,
even though it's a very big machine, very big governmental machine with many groups
and departments.
I think the most striking thing for me was the seniority of the people there.
So the Secretary of the Treasury, the Secretary of Commerce, we had, there also Hester Perce
was there, Commissioner from CFTC was there, lots of very, very senior folks there, as well as Congressional Whip Tom Emmer, Chair of the Digital Assets Subcommittee Brian Stiles.
So very, very senior people, so as well as their representatives.
I expected it actually not to have that many senior people. I thought it would be their representatives kind of talking with us and learning things and beginning some process of collaboration. But the fact that they
were there and they were there throughout the event was a very big deal in my eyes because it
signaled a very strong level of support from the most senior level. And governments are generally
pretty hierarchical, right? So, you know, they're relatively hierarchical
in how they work.
And so when you have people at that senior level
spending their time at events like this,
having positions on it, talking about it publicly,
I think that the shift in the US,
we haven't gone from highly negative to neutral.
It's gone completely from highly negative
to highly positive.
So sometimes with governments, it's a gradual process.
I feel what I'm really what
we're really witnessing here is how quickly the US can change a position and actually start acting
on that position. They were also often talking about moving at tech speed in the government.
So I think this is actually just a goal that's been given to them internally of like, can you
quickly move on solving problems,
even though you're in a government system, which I think is a good mindset.
It's the antithesis of what we're used to from government, obviously, which is that
nothing ever gets done.
It's bureaucracy and red tape, and it feels like they're cutting through that and on behalf
of our industry, which once again, surreal is the only word I think that I could use
for that. You pointed out that all these senior people were there. First of all, I didn't
even expect Trump to be there. I thought that Sachs would be there as the representative of
the White House being the AI and crypto czar. Trump obviously came in, spent time with you.
And then not only were all those senior members you mentioned there, but every single one of them
has been crypto friendly or a Bitcoiner before
even entering government.
I mean, you've got Lutnick, who's an investor in Tether and Cantor Fitzgerald's Custody,
Tether, Sachs, obviously, Bascent, had to divest crypto holdings to become the Treasury
Secretary.
It's unbelievable how much these people get it.
So not only was it incredible that they were there and it wasn't a
bunch of staffers that they sent, but you had the president and all of these people there who are all
outwardly pro-Bitcoin as well, right? Yeah, yeah. I think that there was definitely a representation
from the Bitcoin community in the group that attended, most represented by Michael Saylor and David Bailey.
We did a good job representing that.
And I did see a positive reaction from folks in the government about Bitcoin and that the
US needs to have Bitcoin in the reserve and have a role in Bitcoin and a leadership position
in the world relative to whatever Bitcoin is in the process of becoming now.
I think they do get it.
I think that the people that have been
brought in to solve this problem like David Sachs and Bo Heinz are very competent people from my
interactions with them. And beyond that, I think you basically have a number of very senior people
in the government now who also have held crypto before they had to divest or at least understand
it enough that they previously put a lot of their personal net worth into it.
And it's really, really significant actually, because when you look at how the global financial
system has evolved so far, the choices of the US financial system are actually the biggest set of
driving forces and factors for determining how the global financial system evolves because the US
financial system is the biggest one
in the global system.
So I think it's very significant for our industry,
but it's also very significant for how our industry's technology
will start to get adopted, even separately from the question
of cryptocurrencies.
I agree.
Do you have any personal insight on how the guest list was crafted?
You know, there's a lot of people who obviously were maybe not invited or the,
you know, but obviously everyone who was there seemed handpicked, uh, for a very specific reason. So do you, do you know how those invites were decided on?
I don't know the exact process.
I think it was basically David Sachs and Bo Heinz who were putting together the
summits. So they're the ones. I think you crafted the list of attendees. I saw people that I knew
were already active in DC. So I think being active in DC up until the summit, before the summit,
we've been active there. We've been meeting with congressmen. We've been meeting with people in
the executive branch. We've been meeting with all kinds of people in DC on various key infrastructure related topics. How do you implement proof of reserves? How do you implement
different levels of automated compliance? There were other people that I know were meeting with
them on questions of custody, on questions of taxation, on tech questions of how to do
accounting on crypto tokens. So when I looked around the room,
I saw people that were already very active.
I knew they were active because I'd seen them
and I knew that they had retained lobbyists
and they were active in DC.
I think that was one of the key factors.
I think another factor were the people who had influence
on the creation of a Bitcoin reserve.
So I think there is a subset of the
people who are active in DC who are not interested in much other than Bitcoin adoption.
And so I saw the representatives from that group there. Once again, they were active in DC
and they did that. I think those people, some of them had also supported the Trump campaign at some
point earlier on before they had one. So I think that was, you know, a partial factor,
but I don't think that was the main factor. And then I also think it was a good mix of
people from different from different groups.
Yeah, that's how I viewed it. I actually thought it was an exceptional cross section of the
industry. I know, you know, Bitcoin get mad when a certain person is invited,
a certain person gets mad when the Bitcoiners are invited,
but I thought actually it was very, very well constructed.
So I'm curious, we all obviously saw the portion
of the summit when Trump arrived,
but everything else seemingly was behind closed doors.
Is there any insight you can give us
as to what was discussed
in those few hours specifically at this summit? I mean, you have so many power players, a
limited amount of time. Were there key topics? Was it a general meet and greet? What was
the general vibe?
I mean, the participants in the summit all got a few minutes to go around and put forward
their views and position on how everything should evolve. The secretaries and the congressmen
and the other senior government officials were paying attention and taking notes in
many cases. In some cases, there was some back and forth. So basically, everyone got
time to put forward their position. I think that the positions basically boiled down to
three key categories. Category number one was about the reserve and Bitcoin and the
US's position relative to Bitcoin and how the reserve should evolve in those topics.
Number two was about what's called market structure.
So getting more regulatory clarity on what is a security, what is a commodity, how is that regulated, what branch, what regulatory agency, SEC versus CFTC. This clarity is required for both DeFi and Fintechs and also institutional adoption. So it's
just like a very foundational basic thing that is now in the process of getting done. There was also
talk about other regulations like stable coin regulation and these things. Then the third topic
was basically infrastructure, which started to touch more on the US's role in the US financial
system's role in the new Web3 powered world. This is the topic that
I spent the majority of my time on discussing with folks, presenting ideas
about proof of reserves, actually proof of many other things, proof of
composition, proof of solvency, proof of various things, so that the assets in the
US financial system can be the most reliable assets in the global system, right?
Because the assets prove more and more things about themselves.
And then the other topic that I was also interested in was the automation of compliance to allow
value to flow easily into the US financial system.
So compliance, which still needs to exist because the legal system isn't going away,
but that the compliance can be made less of a burden, less of a cost, less complex.
So I think, yeah, there was those three categories, Bitcoin,
more regulatory clarity and how should infrastructure evolve to solve some
of these existing problems, but really also generate a better,
better version of the U S financial system.
I find that third topic to be by far the most compelling
and would love to talk to you more about it
because I think we've had Bitcoin
as a strategic reserve asset
and the identity of Bitcoin has pretty much been litigated.
I think most people know what it is
and have an idea on its importance to the government
but it's not gonna be the underlying tech
that does all those things that you just discussed.
And obviously as the co-founder
of Chainlink, you talk about proof of reserves, proof of all these things. I mean, that's literally
what you do. Right. You verify proof and make sure that information is accurate. And that's severely
lacking in the United States government. Right. I mean, even when you look at audits of government
agencies, like the Defense Department, that can only prove where 35% of their money is going, I think it's very clear that what you've built and what this
industry has built could go a very, very long way to help with that transparency and accounting. So
they come around the room to you. What's your pitch? What is Chainlink's role in what the
United States is doing moving forward?
Sure, sure.
I'm not going to give you the exact pitch I said because I have a little more time here.
But so I'll give you a general sense of what the answer to your question is.
So I think fundamentally the US as any financial system would want needs to fundamentally do
two things.
It needs to be the origination point of what's known as the base asset. So
the asset that fundamentally underpins the value of everything else. This already happens
for stable coins, where the vast majority of them are backed by US dollars and US treasuries.
But what you want is you want the base asset that backs the rest of the financial system,
whether that's tokenized funds, tokenized real estate,
whatever category you want that asset generated
in your financial system,
because you want that asset to then be bought externally.
So the first step in getting your financial system
to gain the benefit of external consumption of your assets,
of your origination process, of your issuance process,
of your financial services sector,
is that your financial system is the one
where the asset is generated.
Here Chainlink powers the most RWA implementations.
There's independent research on that
from groups like Sentiment that do independent analysis
that people can look up.
We're the largest provider of various technologies
like data feeds to DeFi.
We power the majority of DeFi.
We power, I think, the most proof of reserves
implementations across stable coins, gold coins,
other things.
So that is one category of what Chainlink does
where we are able to prove a lot of information
about assets.
And our view is that the asset will become
what we call a unified golden record
where the asset is
now a form of ownership.
So I will transfer ownership to you.
But in addition to transferring ownership, there will be a kind of a data container attached
to the asset, to the token itself.
And that data container will be dynamically updated near real time about critical information
about the asset.
For example, is the gold there? Is the real estate, is there a lien on it?
Is it underwater with debt?
What is it, right?
So basically, how do you solve this problem
of making the most reliable asset possible
so that your financial system experiences the most demand?
Historically, the U.S. financial system
has actually been quite popular because it's reliable.
It has a legal system, it has relatively low levels of financial fraud for a financial
system, and it has lots of volume and a big domestic economy.
So basically, the first nuance is how do you build a great asset out of the US financial
system?
And that asset canon will be originated by DeFi protocols, FinTechs, Neobanks, digital banks, and smaller institutions and
the largest institutions.
And you want all of those groups doing it.
The second nuanced problem is how do you get the value from the outside world to flow into
the US financial system efficiently so that it can create demand and buy this asset.
The answer to that, I think, boils down to the automation of compliance, which is something that Chainlink oracles also do. So Chainlink oracles can verify different
compliance conditions, but in an automated way. Right now, a lot of this stuff is not very
automated, which creates very high costs for transactions. If you were to automate compliance,
and you were to automate compliance and you were
to have the best asset, you kind of have the best of both worlds. You have the asset that attracts
the global market to buy it. And then you have the frictionless process to buy it that allows the
hundreds of trillions of dollars in institutional capital to do so. So those are the two basic
answers to the question. Chainlink is able to provide the backbone infrastructure for both helping create that
asset.
I mean, we don't create that token itself.
We kind of power the ability for the token to prove things.
And then you also have the ability for the value to flow and purchase the token, both
through the cross-chain system, the compliance-related
systems, identity systems, all those systems.
That's in the financial sector.
There's stuff I didn't have a chance to discuss at this summit, which was about creating a
voting registry and using identity oracles to prove identity for the voting registry.
That's an example of a non-financial use case where you can basically track the ability
of elections to comply with identity requirements and to do that in a way that proves publicly
that that compliance happened in a way that anyone can evaluate. So there's a lot of other
government use cases that aren't financial in nature. They stretch from voting to supply chain
to many other things. But for the US
financial system use case, I think it boils down to these two key aspects of how does
the US financial system make the best asset? And one of the ways that it did that in the
past actually was it regulated or legislated into existence risk agencies like S&P and
Moody's, which at the time was pretty innovative and allowed
the US financial system assets to be better than the non-financial US financial system
assets, at least initially.
So you really want both of those things.
You want to be the origination point of the base asset that's better than everyone's base
asset.
And then if a bunch of DeFi protocols and fintechs in other countries wrap and rewrap
and package and repackage that that's just distribution.
That's fine.
And then you want that distribution to have as little
friction as possible, which basically boils down to low
transaction costs, which basically boils down to look to
automation of compliance.
And so this is the infrastructure that chain link is now in the
process of providing.
So you mentioned S&P and Moody's, obviously, they're credit rating agencies.
To assess risk by giving a rating to the asset, which could be someone's national debt or
anything else.
You're basically saying that you can provide via Chainlink with any asset that's tokenized
a provenance of that asset, right?
Proof of everybody who's owned it before, all the things that you mentioned, and basically
verifying that it's true.
And then as you said, that can be sold from me to you or from one government to another
or any entities without the third parties in between.
Doesn't this fundamentally change or disrupt the largest businesses on the planet?
I mean, we've always talked about this with blockchain, but third parties verifying information is one of the biggest businesses in the world, right? I mean,
that's what banks do when you send a wire, they take a fee, they use the swift system, visa,
mastercard, all of these. I mean, these entities are not going to go quietly into the night.
Sure, sure. So let me describe one or two key things there.
Yes, we have a whole category of what we call proof of.
Proof of is different proofs about the status of an asset.
Everything from proof of reserves, proof of composition, proof of solvency, various proof
ups, right?
That's one of the examples I just described.
You're basically right that markets are composed
of two key aspects.
They are composed of ownership and information.
And the closer you get to what's known as perfect information,
the more of an efficient market that you have.
Now, if we are able to share information
in a near real-time basis, like every few seconds,
rather than having an annual audit
by people that you know commonly
aren't able to audit things because you have things like Bernie Madoff, you have things like
Silicon Valley Bank, you have all kinds of things where there's surprises basically.
And if you eliminate those surprises you get closer to perfect information right so
tokenization and blockchains as a ledger for tokens is very good for the ownership dimension
and Chainlink and Oracle networks are very good for the verification of everything else, including
cross-chain connectivity, data, identity, all these different things.
So one of the things that may just be useful is to understand what Chainlink does, right?
So blockchain networks, they verify three things.
They verify private key signatures, they verify token ledgers, and they verify a state machine
with conditions.
But that state machine cannot actually know anything about anything outside of the chain.
And they can't know anything about another chain.
They can't know anything about identity.
They can't know anything.
They don't even know time.
There's no concept of time for most smart contracts.
So in order to build these advanced applications, even like DeFi, you need
Oracle networks, which they verify everything else.
They verify a command from another system.
They verify identity.
They verify market data.
They verify connectivity between chains.
And what's happening now is that transactions are becoming more complex.
So transactions in the first 2014, 2015 era of what were then called like app coins.
Back when they were called app coins, this was before Ethereum even.
Basically the transactions were very simple.
I sign a transaction to send
my token to you and you sign your transaction, your token to me, and maybe there's a deck somewhere
in there. And so there's a third step of some order matching on chain. Now transactions are
very complex. Even DeFi, you need basically an Oracle network, you need multiple steps in the
transaction. If you want to gain usage of that DeFi protocol from other chains, now you need a data Oracle
and a cross-chain Oracle. If you want to do institutional trading, you need a data Oracle,
a cross-chain Oracle, and an identity Oracle. So that's the three Oracles.
Now you're at 15, 16 steps. So it's just becoming more complex.
now you're at 15, 16 steps. So it's just becoming more complex. So the reality of this situation
is that the people that already provide the data, already provide the payment networks like Swift, Mastercard and others, already provide the identity service, are actually the people that
Chainlink works with to allow their systems to be usable.
So basically, if you want to make a payment over Swift
to buy a tokenized fund, you should be able to do that.
If you want to be able to buy a meme coin with MasterCard
through some kind of DEX mechanism,
you should easily be able to do that.
If you want to consume data from the top data providers
to power your on-chain Dex,
Perp Dex or your lending protocol,
you should be able to do that.
If you want to comply with various identity
and other conditions in order to accept money from,
you know, the largest global banks,
you should be able to easily do that.
All of these problems are basically
infrastructure problems that Chainlink solves, and we do it in a very collaborative way. So we
don't do this in a way where we seek to replace the payment mechanism or we seek to replace the
data provider. We do it in a way where we basically allow that payment system or that data provider to offer their service to the
smart contract community which benefits that data or payment provider. It
benefits the smart contract community and it actually benefits consumers as
well because it lets them engage in their existing user flows and use their
existing kind of data assumptions while being able to use blockchains and DeFi and institutional grade digital assets.
So it's actually all very compatible.
I don't remember who first shared the anecdote.
It was on some show in the earlier days of crypto, I think kind of in the early days
of Chainlink.
And they basically explained it as, well, if you go on some crypto betting site and
you bet on the Knicks and
your friend bets on the Lakers and it goes into a smart contract, well, Chainlink needs
to tell you who actually won the game.
You can make the bet, the smart contract can handle the payout, but how do you verify who
actually won and get that verification?
To me, that's what it really clicked what oracles did in the very, very, very early
days.
I don't know if that's an accurate anecdote, but just for listeners who don't quite understand it,
seems like that makes it very obvious.
I mean, is that a fair example?
Yeah, that's a good example.
That's a completely fair example.
But I guess what I'm saying is,
that would have been how that market would have worked
three, four years ago.
Yeah, of course.
Because that market would have been on one chain.
Now, the way it would actually work is you would still need that data oracle. would have worked three, four years ago. Yeah, of course. Because that market would have been on one chain.
Now the way it would actually work is you would still need that data oracle.
But then one of the people buying into the market would be coming from some other chains.
So you would need a cross-chain oracle.
So interoperability.
Yeah.
And then if you wanted that person to buy in under some kind of set of laws or you wanted
them to pay you from a bank, there would need to be a compliance oracle.
And then let's say you wanted to manage the risk of the market, then there would be a risk oracle. That's right. You would initially need to be-
I was just at the most simple, simple level.
All right. Maybe I'm not making this simple. Maybe I should do that more.
No, no, no. I meant for me, that's how somebody simplified it once and it all clicked as to how
important this is at the most basic level. Yeah. Obviously, you sort of implied that Chainlink steps in after the asset is tokenized. So, I think it's an
important conversation to understand, A, who would tokenize the assets? And in the case of the
government, what are the assets that would most likely be tokenized to actually be transferred?
I mean, there's a lot of conversation, obviously, about real world assets in the private sector,
I mean, there's a lot of conversation, obviously, about real world assets in the private sector, tokenizing real estate, mortgages, car titles, whatever it is, and being able to transfer
them peer to peer without the third party.
But what assets is the government going to tokenize and who's the trusted party that
can do that?
I mean, I think the main thing that most governments are in the process of tokenizing is their
central bank digital currency initiatives, which the US, I don't think think will have over the next few years because of the position that's been
taken on that by the current administration, which I'm actually, you know, I'm fine with
that.
As long as there's clear stable coin regulation and legislation, which is now in the process
of getting finalized and then done and then out there.
So I think stable coins and CBDCs can basically play the same role.
It doesn't really matter which one you have,
I think, in your digital asset economy, as long as you have one of them and they work well.
So I would say that if there's no CBDCs in the US, in general, CBDCs would be my answer. But in the
US financial system, it won't be CBDCs. In the US financial system, I'm really not sure what it is,
because the government sector doesn't usually make
assets or tokenize assets. They provide guidance to the private sector, which will generate all
the assets. One of the ways I think about tokenization is that it's kind of like securitization 2.0.
And in securitization 2.0, you're just going to have all the banks, all the fintechs,
all the DeFi protocols tokenizing,
tokenizing everything they can tokenize.
Some of them will tokenize yield from DeFi.
Some of them will tokenize treasury.
Some of them will tokenize real estate.
And then you're creating this kind of highly interconnected internet, what I call internet
of contracts, where a piece of real estate can now get yield for you because you've tokenized it.
Or a gold bar can now be put into a lending protocol and give you yield in ways that you just couldn't get before.
So I think that the role of the government is to create the legal and regulatory clarity for the people that do tokenize to be able to do that well.
And the governments that do the best job at that will accelerate their digital asset economy to do that more than others. And that'll give them a head start in the
digital asset global marketplace, which is like a critical head start to have that the
US financial system and needs and wants and other financial systems also want and need.
I think fundamentally there are other use cases in the government for blockchains as
a security mechanism, a data security, information
security mechanism, and in terms of solving trust problems.
So fundamentally what blockchains do, whether it's about ownership or whether it's about
information transfer, and ownership really is sort of also information transfer, it's
just information about ownership, is they solve trust problems.
So if there's another collection of trust problems, like something around how do I verify that
the voting system worked correctly?
How do I verify that the supply chain system is complying with fair trade certifications
about misuse of labor or whatever?
There are actually plenty of other use cases that the government has for blockchains that
are not financial in nature.
They just are not as urgent or not as driven by our industry because there's not the same
financial incentive.
But I think eventually almost all government systems everywhere will be backed by blockchain
security for information security, for example, storing and verifying logs or
hashes of logs about system data.
That'll be very widely used to create information security guarantees.
You'll have voting systems, supply chain systems that'll have very large amounts of value from
both being able to make the data more public and being able to make
the data more secure and reliable and have managed more efficiently. So I think governments will not
be a net issuer of assets. I think governments will be a critical guiding force and unlock
for the issuance of assets by others. And I think governments will be a very large net consumer
And I think governments will be a very large net consumer of Oracle network and smart contract infrastructure that allows them to solve basically trust problems.
That's how I think about the value of our industry is what are the trust problems that
we're able to solve?
I think if you look at the general state of affairs in most governments and certainly among their citizens,
we have a pretty big trust problem, right? Nobody on either side seems to trust election results,
as you've pointed out, or trust basically anything coming from the side of the government that is
not the one that they support. So it seems like although the financial incentives don't exist, these are actually potentially the more compelling use cases
for a government to restore that trust in the entire system.
I mean, if you had verifiable third party,
not from a human being voting, you know,
that you knew that the vote was true
and you could confirm the results,
that would solve massive problems.
I mean, I've heard, I know DHS has mentioned, Department of Health Services has mentioned
using blockchain, Doge recently mentioned using blockchain, the SEC, IRS, I mean, FDA,
literally every agency has at least tipped their hat that they're interested.
Yeah, yeah.
So I think you're right that there is a lot of value there.
There's a lot of trust issues with the government
and various processes in the government.
The government also often values transparency
and blockchains naturally create a level of transparency
without additional technical investment.
They just do it kind of naturally.
We've all had experience in the industry
of using block explorers.
Something like a block explorer is a system
someone really has to take a lot of
time to build in the government to prove things about something. But you kind of get the ability
to prove things without any additional investment once you're doing something on a blockchain.
And if you have a block explorer, which there's a million tools for that. Generally speaking,
I think that there are usually one or two killer use cases of every new infrastructure technology.
And blockchains and the blockchain
networks and oracle networks are infrastructure technologies, just to be clear. It's not like
the mobile or personal computing revolution where because you have a new device, you have a new
user experience. That's where people historically, I think, have gotten confused is they're like,
I look at new technology through the lens of new devices that give me new user experiences.
That's not what blockchains are, right?
Blockchains and Oracle networks are basically backend pipes and backend systems that will
change the nature of the user experience you already have through your personal computer
or your mobile computer, right?
So I think people don't fully understand that yet.
I think they're starting to understand.
But usually in all big infrastructure booms like the internet and now the blockchain,
Oracle network, internet of contracts kind of revolution here, you have one or two killer
use cases.
For the internet, that was email.
And then that was, I think, the early versions of e-commerce and maybe money transmission. For the blockchain industry, I think it's
squarely tokenization of ownership and changing of ownership control and assumptions. And
I think it's financial products. So I think what's going to happen is that the very strong
incentives that our industry has to resolve all these government issues and guidance issues and regulatory and legal clarity
issues around the use of blockchain networks and Oracle networks and smart contracts for
financial use cases.
That will be the first place where there's a lot of government understanding and there's
a new level of comfort when relying on this technology.
Once that level of comfort happens,
once people in the US government, for example, are using email, it's much more natural for them
to order things for the US government through the internet from e-commerce websites or send purchase
orders over email. So I think the financial use case kind of opens it up and governments understand and understand the power and value of blockchains.
But I think fundamentally governments all over the world, including the US government, will be large, large net consumers.
Like there was a certain point where you have something called a whole of government purchase.
And a whole of government purchase is when there's like a decision across the federal government to buy a certain technology.
This is what Microsoft got, right?
So Microsoft was able to get adopted by the US federal government at a very specific,
very valuable point in time.
That basically is the point at which your technology becomes ubiquitous because once
the government adopts it, it starts being required for so many things.
So many things are now running on Microsoft
that it kind of just naturally becomes
the way such a large percentage of the world
or your country does things.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, it makes perfect sense, of course.
I mean, if you want to work with the government
in any way, shape or form or interact,
then you need to be using Microsoft Word or Excel spreadsheet or whatever it is.
Obviously, we've all been there where someone says an Excel spreadsheet and you're on a
device that doesn't have Microsoft installed and you can't open it.
Right.
And they're from the government.
So you have to use Excel spreadsheet.
You might want to use Excel spreadsheet.
You might not want to use Excel spreadsheet.
You have to deal with them.
They're the government.
So, this is one of the things that we're trying to work through is how can Chainlink be the
open standard that these governments get on so that their economies and their society
runs on these kind of data and ownership rails.
Right.
I mean, we know everybody's discussed to death the game theory of, for example, a strategic
Bitcoin reserve, right?
The United States is the biggest financial system in the world.
If they put Bitcoin on the balance sheet, every central bank in the world is basically
forced to because the United States did, right?
I think if we get market structure and regulatory clarity, it'll push a lot of places that haven't
achieved that yet to also pursue it rather quickly.
But you've sort of said that the United States wants to be the leader in blockchain. What since
we're not doing a central bank digital currency, a CBDC, what
can the United States do on the adoption level, all these things
that we're talking about to signal to the rest of the world
that blockchain technology is the choice and you all have to,
you know, accept my Microsoft Excel spreadsheet as another
government in the world.
Yeah, yeah.
So you're right about the US's role in the system.
They're often known in the circles
that create these regulations on an international level
as what's known as a super regulator,
because there's so many other regimes,
regulatory regimes that align with their regulatory view,
basically because it allows their economy
to efficiently do business with the US economy
and set up financial systems and products and services.
There's kind of two modes of thought right now
in DC and just generally.
One mode of thought is,
let's make a very attractive environment
for teams in the United States to emerge and start building more stuff.
And also let's get all the teams that were polarized away from the United States in the
previous four years and get them to come back from other jurisdictions.
And that is based off of the kind of historical Silicon Valley model of human capital coming to the
US to generate the leading technologies of their type.
And you know, that's that's trying to follow that pattern.
And that's a real pattern.
That pattern makes sense.
You know, how do you get all the best teams, either domiciled, building, living, working, launching, coming to, being part of the United
States kind of community of people, geographically even.
Now I think that still generally makes sense, but I think it a little bit underestimates
the degree to which our industry is so highly, highly globalized already.
Our industry is built on open source software
that's made by globally interconnected teams.
There's already been quite a massive amount done
to get a bunch of teams to leave the US,
which will take years to correct.
And a lot of these teams fundamentally
are all remote work all the time.
For example, our team is completely remote work all the time. Lots of other crypto teams are all remote work all the time. For example, our team is completely remote work all the time.
Lots of other crypto teams are all remote work all the time
with global teams, right?
So I think that's one theory, right?
Let's get the teams back.
Let's get everyone doing that.
But if we were back in 1990
and everyone sat in a room together,
that would be more powerful.
It's still powerful,
but it's not as powerful as it might seem. I think the more valuable critical thing is basically TVL, Total
Value Locked, or in the TradFi sense, AUM, Asset Center Management, whatever we want to call it,
right? It's all the same thing. It's how much value does your system hold, Basically. And that's what I mentioned before about the base asset where
you basically want everyone to wrap and rewrap the asset that comes out of your financial system.
And the answer to that question is, how do you get JP Morgan? How do you get State Street? How
do you get Goldman Sachs? How do you get these top global banks to start issuing high quality
tokenized assets with all the relevant compliance, data, accounting requirements, all of those being met? How do you do that?
I'm guessing you know what I think the answer is, but yeah, we obviously work a lot on that.
They're starting.
Yeah, we're starting more and more to work a lot with them on that. And we have a lot
of public live implementations that we're showing to people and kind of publicly
disclosing now more and more.
That's one group.
Then you have the fintechs.
You have people like Robinhood and PayPal and these kind of, well PayPal really isn't
a fintech anymore, but I mean, I guess it kind of is.
Basically fintechs, non-institutional, but technology companies that are trying to play, do pieces of what
institutions do, basically.
Big fintechs, little fintechs, how do you get them comfortable?
And then you have the DeFi community.
I think the DeFi community will issue a lot of great assets, but the DeFi community historically
doesn't have access to the best assets.
The banking system has access to the best assets because The banking system has access to the best assets
because all of their global clients own the assets. And then the fintechs might have access
to some of the assets. And then the DeFi folks, the DeFi folks, I think will actually play much
more a role of creating markets and distribution and partnering with institutions to provide technology and systems and contracts and smart contracts
that allow the proper issuance of these assets. So the answer, in my opinion, is how does the US
get to the same percentage of tokenized assets, real world assets, digital assets coming out of the US that it has for
stable coins. Stable coins are 90% plus US dollar based. That's what success looks like.
That's what success looks like for a tokenized asset. And my personal view is that real world
assets will eclipse and become much, much larger
than the cryptocurrency industry. Just like the percentage of internet traffic that's about email
is much, much less than the percentage of internet traffic about everything else.
And that doesn't mean that email isn't valuable and that email wasn't critical
to getting the internet to be valuable for people. But fundamentally, there's maybe another, I don't know, double or triple the global
demand for cryptocurrencies out there.
But there's hundreds of trillions of dollars in assets that can be tokenized, both currencies
and commodities and real estate and gold and everything. So the way success looks is what the US kind of naturally acquired through the stablecoin
industry where the 90% plus of stablecoins are US dollar based.
If you had a similar picture for real world assets where 70 or 80% or 60% even were originate,
the real world assets were originated in the
US system.
That's what success looks like.
We're very far from that.
Right now, most real world asset teams and others have purposefully kind of incorporated
themselves outside the US system and are having Middle East, Singapore, Hong Kong, these all places where if you look back to
where we were last year, we were there many months talking also with their regulators,
with their central banks, announcing various transactions. For example, in Singapore,
we did the most transactions of anyone in our industry in something called the Guardian
framework, which is the central bank of Singapore's framework for
regulated transactions. So yeah, if the US wants to have the same percentage of the market, of the
AUM, of the underlying base asset layer that backs RWAs, it needs to move very fast. But I am seeing that movement at a speed
where it could achieve that.
It's very clear that this technology unlocks
an incredible amount of value as you talk.
It just becomes clearer and clearer and clearer,
more obvious.
So what stage would you say we're at
in that level of adoption specifically
for these big banks, asset managers,
governments and institutions.
Retail, I hate to say, is somewhat irrelevant, right, when it comes to just sheer numbers.
So are we in the first inning, the third inning, the sixth inning?
Where are we at in this process?
And how do we eventually get them to be fully participating in DeFi, these institutions?
I think now we've gone from the early middle to the middle of the process.
I think on like the adoption curve, we're starting to go up the curve towards total
mainstream adoption.
We're not up there yet.
We're not at the bottom.
We're starting to go.
We're like at, we're not in the middle of the curve.
We're in the early stages of the middle portion of that curve. And that is primarily driven by non-US governments and non-US teams, which is what concerns the
US.
And it's basically people in Singapore, Hong Kong, Dubai, these geographies.
There are already frameworks there that make it clear how this works, where you have clear
stablecoin regulation about how you buy a digital asset, what is a digital asset, how
you issue a digital asset, what is a digital asset, how you issue a digital asset.
So one of the first things that needs to happen and is in the process of happening is clarity
on how you can legally generate these assets and then clarity on how you can legally buy
the assets.
Because there is a market for anonymous, pseudonymous, DeFi and other transactions where you don't
need to do it under any set of legal conditions or guidance.
But that market is only so big.
It's a big market and it's interesting, but fundamentally, you don't get the majority
of the world's wealth through that market.
Where you get the majority of the world's wealth through that market. Where you get the majority of
the world's wealth, by the way, retail, whether it's retail or whether institutional, like for me,
something like Fidelity, which has millions of user accounts, is actually, it looks like
institutional, but it's driven by retail consumption. And the way that that would work is,
you would go into your Fidelity user interface and you
would be able to buy a digital asset, basically.
Once you can go into your existing financial services provider, Robinhood, PayPal, Fidelity,
something from Goldman Sachs, something from someone else, basically those groups are not
suddenly going to lose their user base.
What's going to happen and what's already in the process of happening is that user base
can now buy a digital asset because those providers of the financial service of the
UI of the app can legally let them do that.
So you have to unlock all of this demand that exists that is currently
just kind of stopped by, you know, I don't know what the right analogy is. I forget what
this thing is called, but sometimes when they let the water out of a part of the reservoir
that's dammed, they open up this big thing that lets the water out. I don't remember what that's called,
but that's what I'm talking about. I'm basically talking about opening the flood gates. There you
go. So we just need that. We need legislation and regulation that makes it clear what you can and
cannot do. And it has to be favorable to allow people to do what we need. Exactly. Well, actually
not even people, it has to be for companies, right? It has to be so that institutions, right?
No PayPal has like three cryptocurrencies or five or 10 cryptocurrencies that you can
buy on it.
You can't quote unquote ape into Aave on there.
You should be able to ape into Aave on PayPal, the app.
Why not?
Like you're already on PayPal.
Aave wants you to take your money and put it into Aave.
But why?
Because PayPal doesn't know how it works legally.
They can't take, they can't let you, they want to let you, they want to give you
that user experience or same thing with Robinhood or same thing with JP Morgan,
same thing with whoever.
They want to provide access to all of these user experiences that are driven by
DeFi, driven by like, think about it, think about it this way.
This is a perfect example.
There's now ways to earn yield
in the DeFi community on gold.
Gold is the kind of historically,
the clearest example of like a non-yield bearing asset,
right, that's very popular.
People have large percentages of their portfolio in gold,
but they can't get any yield on it,
which is kind of painful when you can get 5% on the US dollar, right? Now, imagine if you could get yield on gold.
How valuable is that to people in TradFi, where they're fighting over 10 basis points, 20 basis
points is like a fortune for them. And now you take a non-yield bearing asset that's a substantial
portion of all their clients' portfolios, and you let them earn even 2% on that.
That's 200-billion, it's mind-blowing to them.
The problem is that no matter how mind-blowing it is, unless they can do it legally, they
just can't do it.
So once those floodgates are open, I think there is a massive influx of new capital and new usage into all
kinds of things.
This is, by the way, why ETFs are so attractive and popular.
ETFs are the one structure that people currently have where they can legally allow folks in
the retail general world to interact with the blockchain asset base.
But think about how limited that structure is.
That structure doesn't mean you're using DeFi,
doesn't mean you're getting yield.
It just means you hold some crypto token
in a different legal form and then legal wrapper.
It's a wrapper for a portfolio.
And look how bonkers everyone is going.
It's like the biggest deal ever. Why is that? a portfolio. Yeah, yeah. And look how bonkers everyone is going.
It's like the biggest deal ever.
Why is that?
It's because it's the very, very early version of what I'm talking about.
Right.
Even just unlocking the access, much less the yield and all the things that come with
it like in a way that fiduciaries and risk managers are allowed to even gain exposure.
Like you think that buying Bitcoin would not be some great unlock,
but it gives them a way to buy Bitcoin or buy Ethereum or whatever other ETFs
are approved. It really is true.
Yeah. People are confused by this.
They think like, because I can go on to finance and buy Bitcoin that,
that I've, we've been able to expose all of global demand to Bitcoin.
There's people with investment committees and policies about how they can invest.
They can't invest in ETFs.
They can't invest in cryptocurrencies, but they can buy ETFs.
And some of them can't even buy the ETFs yet.
And some of them can't even buy the X8.
And this sounds insane to people because they're not used to managing an institutional pension fund. But this is the type of stuff that
I'm talking about, that once you open these floodgates of legal clarity and regulatory clarity,
our industry actually goes from being about cryptocurrencies to being about digital assets
and real world assets, because that's the thing that money flows into in a very large proportion,
tokenized real estate, tokenized funds.
This is actually what we've been building towards and what we've built the infrastructure
for.
Yeah, it's not just the tokens themselves, but you're unlocking the value of literally
everything that can be tokenized.
It's thousands of multiples larger.
The question is though, we need legislation, obviously, for them to be able to do all the things you just said,
to be able to participate in DeFi. How do they then, even if we get the green light to be able
to invest or participate, how do we allow them to assess counterparty and smart contract risk and
all the other issues that come with cryptocurrency, that even if you get a green light and you go do something and you get hacked by Lazarus, your money's gone.
So I think that's the other element of it that's yet to be solved for.
Well that's where more information becomes quite valuable.
And that's something we have a lot of experience with in terms of Bybit and all that stuff.
I think they ended up hacking the interface
and some other aspects, not necessarily.
It was a third party. Yeah, it was the wallet.
I mean, it was basically a phishing attack
on the UX UI of the wallet, right?
Or the multi-sig provider.
Yeah, yeah. So it wasn't necessarily the contracts,
you know, to your point there.
I think you get to a level of reliability
on certain key pieces of infrastructure.
And this is really what Chainlink as a community and as a set of protocols and as a standard
for basically being able to build and manage a transaction. That's really the way to think
about Chainlink is that you can build and manage complex blockchain transactions in
ways that you can't with anything else. The key thing there is
that as you build and manage that complex transactions, the key fundamental primitives
and pieces of infrastructure that you're relying on are reliable. Like the contract won't break
and get hacked. The oracle that we're giving you the data won't break and get hacked. The cross
chain bridge that's moving the value over to the buyer and the buyer's stablecoin to you doesn't break and get hacked. Now, if you don't have
a reliable set of core pieces of infrastructure, core primitives, you fundamentally can't build
anything without that. It's kind of like the foundation of a building. If you don't make
the foundation of a big building correctly, then you'll have,
you know, there's like this building in San Francisco where it's like leaning in one direction.
That's kind of how I think a lot of other Oracle things are built is that they simply do not stand
up to basic security reviews and security verifications, which is why Chainlink powers
the majority of DeFi from inception of the industry to today.
So I think the fundamental requirement for that is that the building blocks are reliable
and then developers will be very good at composing them.
And the building blocks will have what's called separation of concerns.
So this building block can only do this and only this and this building block can do this and only
this and the risk that you run with the code or the system that connects them is
very low. So now your risk is very low, right? Because the risk of the two
building blocks not doing what they're supposed to do or getting hacked is low
and the the system or the code that connects the building blocks is highly reliable.
So now your reliability is very high. And we actually have this system as well.
It's called the Chainlink Runtime Environment, where you write the code to connect all the
different chains and all the different Oracle networks into one application.
So my answer as someone who's part of a community that builds infrastructure is not, not to surprisingly
really reliable infrastructure.
And then the model is that all the other developers, the JP Morgan developers, the State Street
developers, the Goldman Sachs developers, the Aave developers, the PayPal developers,
they take these building blocks the same way that they use AWS or Azure or GCP,
and they compose them into increasingly useful
and valuable applications.
And then they pay something back to the building blocks
from the value that they get
from the user experience they created, right?
So at the end of the day,
we're never building the user experience itself.
We're always trying to
build the most reliable set of building blocks. And now we're in the process of releasing a
system that actually lets you connect those building blocks into this advanced complex
contract that requires data, identity, cross-chain, compliance, risk oracles. Yeah, so that's basically the answer.
Somehow we got to an hour here.
There's about a thousand more questions I wanted to ask you.
So I hope we can do another one down the road.
I guess one final question is how far down this path
do you think we will be in, let's say five years?
In five years, what level of adoption do you think
that we will have of
everything that you're building? I think very far because now the biggest limiting factor, which was
the headwind of government regulation and government support has gone from a headwind
to a tailwind. So I think the last five years were very slow compared to the next five years,
because the last five years were about people resisting.
There's like this quote, like first they argue with you,
then they laugh at you, then they do something,
then they accept you.
I think we're in the middle one.
Ignore you, laugh you, fight you, then you win, I think.
Right, I think we're in the like,
I think we're even past the they fight you thing at
this point, right? Fight you thing is gone. That's it. Like whoever was fighting the industry,
that's gone, right? I've been to these other geographies and countries, Singapore, Hong
Kong, Dubai, I've worked with, you know, various central banks in these places. They already
embrace this. Now the biggest financial system in the world, the US financial system has
embraced this as we talked at the system in the world, the US financial system has embraced
this as we talked at the beginning about the most senior people there showing up. I think now
it's really just about creating the final pieces of clarity that everyone wants and everyone wants
to create. That hopefully happens this year or next year. That then accelerates the market into
a new stage of adoption. And then that adoption hopefully results in better experiences, better use cases, better
dynamics around the user experience.
Does that make sense?
Makes perfect sense.
And so if you make better...
Basically the floodgates open.
They've taken the governor off.
They've eliminated all the restrictions and now we prove what we can do.
That's right.
Absolutely love it.
Sergey, man, it's a pleasure to have this opportunity to talk to you.
Congratulations once again on being a part of that summit.
Really such an epic moment in time, such an honor, man, and I hope we can do this again
in the future.
It was my pleasure to be at the summit.
It's my pleasure speaking with you.
Thank you for having me.
Thanks so much.
