how to Design Web3 TokenomicsCrypto RookiesCrypto Rookies·
Nearly all the crypto-assets currently launched by web3 companies suffer horrible tokenomics design. This is the first in a series of blog posts that will attempt to share insights on best practice of tokenomics design and where the future is heading. This series of blog posts should be useful to web3 entrepreneurs but also for investors looking to better understand what they are investing in. Proper understanding of tokenomics is one of the most critical aspects needed for analyzing the financial value and sustainability of crypto-assets.
Evaluation of assets can be decomposed into 1) supply management, and 2) incentive boosting demand. While most of the topics in this blog post can be found elsewhere, the topic of network effects applied to crypto-assets has not been overly discussed and may come as new critical information to most in how to design or assess tokenomics. Additional blog posts will be published directed at web3 ventures in order to design their tokenomics using the latest of best practices. Let’s first do a review of micro-economics of supply and demand and its effect on prices.
Micro-Economics of Supply & Demand
Many factors come into play when markets adjust the price of an asset. When it comes to the crypto-industry, prices of assets are adjusted by two mechanisms typically speaking, which are through a bounding curve (often used by Decentralized Exchanges (DEX) such as Uniswap), and through order books (the standard for Centralized Exchanges (CEX) such as Binance).
In both of these cases, the balance between selling volume and buying volume causes the price to shift downward or upward respectively. More precisely, buying volume reduces the available supply of an asset available on an exchange, resulting in a lower ratio of token A versus token B, such that now token A is more expensive compared to token B. Therefore, increasing the demand of an asset reduces its supply from an exchange and results in a price increase. Meanwhile, a reduction of demand (selling volume), does the opposite by increasing the supply available on the exchange and consequently reducing its price.
[Figure 1. Law of Supply & Demand]
[Figure 2. Bounding Curve]
Note that the value of capital is obtained by multiplying the quantity of an asset by its price. Further, should we assess the value by comparing to US currency, or comparing to other assets. I would argue that in some cases comparing to US currency may not be the most logical. For example, as a crypto trader, I often lose value of my assets when compared to US currency, however the quantity of tokens I have often increase while the market is going down, and therefore when the market goes back to its original price then my total capital has increased significantly, so the loss is only temporary and somewhat fictional. In which case I sometimes prefer to assess the value of my assets and return on investment (ROI) in terms of the quantity of tokens (exemple how many Ethereum I have while trading).
Regardless, it becomes critical for successful crypto ventures to properly incentivize demand while reducing supply in a sustainable manner.
Minting, Burning, and Fixed Supply Mechanisms
The first two mechanisms to manipulate the supply of a token economy is to encode a burning mechanism which will reduce the supply of a token over time in order to increase scarcity. This method is believed to incentivize a long term increase of value for a project, and while in theory it is true, it is often done in a way that has no short term effect on the price because market participants evaluate the value emotionally without quantitative assessment.
Minting is the opposite process of burning tokens, this is often used to slowly release additional tokens in the supply and is primarily used to incentivize adoption (demand). Ideally, the minting process can be significant in the early life of a project, until a reversal occurs and the burning mechanism starts to become greater, which is the case for Ethereum at the moment. Some projects, such as Bitcoin, have a fixed supply (no minting, and no burning). However, not all Bitcoins are currently on the market, and in this case, new tokens are obtained through the process of mining to support the network operations. Fortunately, the release of these mined tokens is slow and hopefully inferior to the adoption rate of the network, leading to price appreciation. Regardless of the fixed supply, minting, and burning mechanism of a project, it is important to attempt to understand the future action of these mechanisms on the supply. Many projects reward users with free tokens for their involvement on a project, and while this creates an incentive for adoption, it has to be done in a way that prevents significant increase of supply that would reverse the financial incentive of existing users to remain part of the community.
Overall, minting to incentivize users during phases of large adoption is acceptable as it slows down excessive price appreciation, however it is not sustainable when a network reaches a plateau and starts decreasing in value.
Staking
Staking is the process of locking tokens on a platform for a certain amount of time in order to receive additional financial rewards. Since the tokens are then locked, the participants are unable to sell their tokens in the event of a rapid downturn, so it slows down selling pressure. Since the staking process offers additional financial incentives, the demand for the token also increases, therefore it is usually a good way to increase demand while reducing supply. Unfortunately, many projects offer these rewards out of the token supply, and as such just push problems down the road making the projects unsustainable. Ideally, one would have to make investments with the liquidities that have been locked into staking, and if these investments generate additional revenues, a portion of these revenues are then used to provide the financial reward to the stakers. Unfortunately, very few projects manage their staking this way, and staking then becomes a financial loss.
Bank-Run Risk & Pre-Minted Token Allocation
The vast majority of crypto ventures allocate some of their token supply to early investors, and to their team, to their foundation, to their advisors, before even the token gets launched on an exchange in a process called Pre-Minted Token Allocation. The token allocated can eventually make their way to the exchanges which will result in selling volume. Considering the money raised from these private investors have often been used to develop the project, this implies the money is no longer available when investors sell their tokens, in which case if the project has not generated outside revenue, it’s almost like a ponzi scheme where new investors money is used to pay returns to earlier investors without real value creation. Regardless, the price of the asset on a DEX is entirely calculated from the ratio of the tokens in the pair such that only a small fraction of the token supply is kept in the liquidity pool on the DEX (even worse if the token is traded on multiple DEX and CEX). The liquidity pool (essentially similar to a bank) is composed of a portion of supply of the token and usually a portion of stablecoin such as USDT). More often than not, the liquidity available on the DEX is lower than what was previously allocated to the early investors, team, etc. Overall, this implies that a “bank run” is very much a possibility. A bank run is when too many people withdraw their money from the bank while the bank doesn’t have enough liquidity on hand to give to everyone requesting their withdrawals. In the case of crypto, if there is not enough liquidity available in the bank (liquidity pool), the ratio of token versus stablecoin can become exponentially costly resulting in massive drop in price. What is important to note here, is that liquidities on any exchanges are typically much smaller than the overall amount of tokens in circulation, so bank runs frequently result in token losing more than 90% of their value. Fortunately, the bounding curve mechanism prevents token supply from reaching 0 which would be a complete collapse of the token price, instead the ratio becomes exponentially small resulting in massive price swings.
Given that liquidity is often small, the mathematical result of the bounding curve is that a $1 of buying volume often leads to value creation for the entire pool of investors to be much greater than $1, hence the value is entirely fictitious and only possible as long as most investors do not sell their assets.
Projects typically request vesting periods for those pre-allocated tokens, however the vesting is often short such as 1 or 2 years. This means, a massive increase of supply of the token will become in-circulation in the first few years of the project and this is a lot of potential selling volume. What’s worse is that often the project vesting occurs at a specific time point instead of having daily vesting, as such investors receive a large amount of tokens to sell at the same time as other investors instead of spreading the vesting. Given this potential selling volume, adoption consequently needs to be massive in order to have more buying volume than selling volume, and this is where the problem is, more crypto-assets become pure pump and dump unable to sustain the selling pressure within the first few years. It becomes very risky to buy into such projects in their early stages after the initial launch on the market. Lots of projects end up just spending insane amounts of money on marketing and publicity which boost buying volume, but most often have no effect on real value creation for the ecosystem.
Overall, when evaluating crypto-assets, it is critical to look at the fully diluted market capitalization (FDMC) versus the market capitalization in circulation (MCIC) (FDMC — MCIC = unallocated supply). As well as the vesting period of pre-allocated tokens, and the distribution strategy of the remaining unallocated token supply. If the total market capitalization in circulation is let’s say $1B USD, but the sum of all liquidity available on exchanges (both CEX, DEX) is only $100M, this means if everyone withdraws their money, the price could collapse to the point that most investors would suffer significant financial losses (bank run scenario). Therefore, there needs to be an incentive for users to remain part of the economy when adoption starts plateauing or worse decreasing.
Network Effects for Crypto-Assets
Network Effects have been identified as one of the best mechanisms for maintaining competitive advantages for businesses. For example, Facebook benefited from massive network effects as it reached critical mass adoption. Typically, network effects are when the benefit of adding an additional user increases the value for all participants exponentially. For example, 4 users in a network effect have more value together than 2 groups of 2 users taken separately. In the case of Facebook, if someone has 100 friends, then the cost of transitioning to Google Plus and starting with only 2 friends would a significant reason to remain on the Facebook platform, because it becomes impossible to transition all users at once, and people want to remain connected, the more friends you have, the more benefit and inertia you associate with the platform. When it comes to crypto-assets, the network effect is associated with financial value, the more new users join, the more wealth is accrued into the price of the asset. This network effect creates incredible fear of missing out as being early in a project can lead to 1000%+ return on your investment often within just a few months. Unfortunately, in the case of Facebook, when users start moving to other platforms, there is no financial loss to the remaining participants, which is not the case for crypto-assets, the loss of participants leads to a loss of financial wealth for the remaining participants which can lead to negative network effects. Negative network effects are when there is a significant incentive to abandon a crypto-asset before they start collapsing. Overall, this often ends up being called a pump (positive network effect) followed by a dump (negative network effect).
To this day, we have seen very few cases of crypto-assets that have built in network effects to incentivize participants to remain in the economy during a collapse. Which is one important reason why crypto-assets are known to often lose more than 90% of their value during a market downturn.
Speculator versus Real Users
For any crypto projects, the community is composed of real users and of speculators, more often than not, successful crypto projects can have massive growth due to speculators buying the token only for the wealth generation potential. Compared to any other industry, the crypto-industry is mostly driven by speculators’ behaviors. For example, metaverse projects such as Decentraland have less than 100 players on any given day, yet have a market cap of more than $1B USD, which has been accrued mostly by speculators. Meanwhile, real successful games can often have more than 100M players daily and have a market cap lower than Decentraland. All of these insane metrics show how the economy of crypto-assets can be driven by speculators. At the same time, this is a real danger for crypto-projects given that at any time these speculators may choose to sell their token triggering a negative network effect for real users. Reaching a plateau of adoption is often enough to trigger these speculators to move on to the next project resulting in price collapse. Unlike real users, speculators have no loyalty to a project and will simply follow the financial incentive which makes the negative network effect so impactful in a period of collapse.
Revenue Model… not just Tokenomics
The crypto-industry was built on pure tokenomics alone, and unlike publicly listed companies on the stock market which typically generate revenues for their products/services, crypto ventures often generate no revenues at all. This is a massive problem for sustainability because it implies that once mass adoption for a crypto project starts to saturate, then it becomes very hard to maintain the price, and even considering the burning mechanism, the financial incentives become oriented toward selling more than remaining a holder. While this will raise eyebrows in the crypto-community, Bitcoin’s value is entirely dependent on scarcity and market adoption, however imagine adoption disappear, then the financial incentive to remain part of the network vanish regardless if there is scarcity or not. Sure, some collectors may want to buy their own Bitcoin as a collector in the future if there is a total collapse, but the whole point of Bitcoin was to be a digital currency, and it now used more as a long term store of value. Overall, these philosophical debates may have worked in the past and made Bitcoin the king of crypto, but in 2023, tokenomics alone is no longer enough. The future of crypto-assets has to be built on real revenue generation potential that grows alongside real users, not speculators. There are an increasing number of web3 ventures now incorporating revenue streams supporting their tokenomics, and it needs to become the majority for real sustainability. For examples of revenue models integrated into tokenomics, you may look into a DEX called GMX, where a portion of revenue generated by the exchange is used to financially sustain demand for their token.
Unsustainable Growth
Too many times in the past crypto projects that were successful grew at insane speed. In some cases even past 10,000% in a year. This implies that early adopters with an investment of $1000 were rewarded with more than $100,000 a year later, making a lot of overnight millionaires. Unfortunately, this creates fear of missing out (FOMO), and also becomes financially unsustainable when early participants start selling their token, since the liquidity pool (bank) did not grow at 10,000% for reasons described above. This means the likelihood of a bank run increases, and the negative network effect becomes larger. All of which makes pump and dumps inevitable and leaves late entry participants in ruins. Overall, this leads to high volatility, which prevents real utility and long term user adoption for the industry. Meanwhile, more than $180T (180 times the current size of the crypto-market) is held by businesses across the world in traditional banking. Very little of this money will transition to crypto as long as the volatility remains what it is, since these businesses cannot afford to see their treasury shrink by 30%+ in a given month when they need to pay their employees, suppliers, etc. So, what makes the crypto-industry great also makes it impossible to grow much further unless new mechanisms are introduced to support and sustain long lasting lower volatility tokenomics. Long term sustained growth is more important overnight success.
Conclusion
We explained the various forces and tokenomics principles mediating price movements for crypto-assets, however the industry is still in the early stage, and additional mechanisms need to be introduced to enhance the long term sustainability of crypto-assets, as well as attracting new participants such as businesses. In the next blog post, we will theorize such new potential mechanisms to help web3 builders in designing better economies for themselves and their community. Here’s a list of the full series:
- Advanced Web3 Tokenomics Design — Part 1: Revenue Streams
- Advanced Web3 Tokenomics Design — Part 2: Pre-Seed Funding without Pre-Minted Token Allocation
- Advanced Web3 Tokenomics Design — Part 3: Active Treasury Management, Minting, & Burning
- Advanced Web3 Tokenomics Design — Part 4: Staking
- Advanced Web3 Tokenomics Design — Part 5: Profitable Loan Programs
- Advanced Web3 Tokenomics Design — Part 6: Network Effects Design
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