Original author: James Ho, Co-founder of Modular Capital

Original translation: TechFlow

Vincent and I founded @Modular_Capital 2 years ago with the belief that the use cases for cryptocurrencies will expand. The last cycle was focused on decentralized finance (defi) and non-fungible tokens (NFTs), which we believe are powerful primitive assets (both speculative and non-speculative), but we believe cryptocurrencies have much more potential than that.

Here are some instances we’ve found in the B2B space where there is real use case for this that is not speculative, and these are just three examples that I can think of.

Stablecoins

We have issued over $160 billion in stablecoins (90%+ of which are Tether and USDC), with monthly trading volume of over $2-3 trillion. Instant, global, 24/7 real-time payments (rather than T+1 day, weekend closed) is a huge innovation. Legacy infrastructure is difficult to modernize for coordination reasons.

Over the past two years, we’ve seen several primitives driving this adoption, including the issuance of native stablecoins on more chains, fast and cheap cross-chain bridges (like @AcrossProtocol, @circle’s CCTP), low-fee chains reducing transaction costs (Solana, Base both have transaction fees under 1 cent), and multi-currency stablecoins (EUR, GBP, JPY).

Being a stablecoin issuer is an extremely profitable business. Every consumer and business needs idle cash that isn’t earning interest for payments, working capital, etc. These issuers keep most of the ~5% they receive for themselves. Tether makes billions of dollars in profits each year, and Circle has already filed for an IPO in secret.

Source: @artemis__xyz

DePin (Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Network)

In the last cycle, Helium sold over 2 million boxes worldwide for IoT coverage. While this did not generate much demand and was often mocked, the point is to democratize capital formation for physical networks through a global asset ledger and micropayments and achieve massive scale.

Since then, we’ve seen DePin success stories like @heliumMobile (100,000+ telecom users), @Hivemapper (~150,000 contributors mapping ~13 million km of unique maps, almost half of Google Maps), @GEODNET_ (world’s largest RTK GPS data network with 6,000+ miners), and more.

DePin can radically reduce the cost of setting up and operating these networks by more than 90%. Typically, installing a box requires paying for it with balance sheet capex, renting land or facilities, and sending technicians for ongoing maintenance. It turns out there are many consumers around the world willing to do these things for a small amount of ownership (via tokens) in the network. This is something blockchain uniquely enables, enabling programmatic, global micropayments.

Supply side is only half the battle for DePin networks. All of these networks need demand side. We are currently seeing this happening. Hivemapper and Geodnet are both approaching $1M in annualized revenue (through on-chain native token buybacks in the past 2-3 months). This wave of new DePin networks are finding product-market fit and paying customers.

Asset Tokenization

Asset tokenization has been talked about for a long time, but its on-chain adoption has been slow due to its regulated nature (even more so than stablecoins, which do not pay interest).

We see two approaches. Traditional issuers on-chain, notably Blackrock’s tokenized Treasury bond fund ($BUIDL), which has ~$500M issued on Ethereum so far. The other is crypto-native products launching new funds under existing regulatory frameworks: @OndoFinance, @superstatefunds, @maplefinance, etc. are all examples. Both approaches are valid. Notably, this has not happened with stablecoins (all crypto-native companies like Tether, Circle), and now traditional financial institutions are finally realizing the importance of issuing on-chain.

Tokenized Treasuries approach $1.5 billion in issuance. Large issuers will join, existing products will scale, and new asset types will be tokenized on-chain.

Source: @rwa_xyz

Tokenization unlocks important features, including 24/7 transfer and settlement, composability, and major upgrades to the traditional infrastructure of most financial institutions, such as the middle and back offices and reconciliation. JPMorgan Chase expects to save more than $20 million in repurchase volume by tokenizing it. Blockchain becomes the modern asset ledger of the 21st century.

Source: coindesk

Yesterday during the GameStop trading frenzy, the NYSE experienced a technical failure, resulting in downtime, trading suspension, and the system showing Berkshire and gold prices fell 98-99%.

Yesterday, there were no volatility suspensions, trading failures, price errors, or other issues on Ethereum and Solana.

Ethereum launched in 2015 and Solana in 2020 — while both have had major outages, bugs, and downtime in the past, they have become time- and battle-tested systems.

The modern global asset ledger will become the preferred settlement layer for more assets.

Stablecoins, tokenized treasuries, ETFs, and more — these are just the beginning.

Original link