DeFi on Bitcoin

Bitcoin’s design has unique characteristics that make it impossible to perform certain actions, and this has led developers and users to seek greener pastures in the Ethereum ecosystem. However, the same drawbacks conversely make Bitcoin more secure and stable.

In the article about Bitcoin’s Script protocol language, we discussed that many applications are not possible on Bitcoin due to its limited instruction set.

That’s why there will never be Bitcoin-native DeFi applications because the underlying smart contracts (a fancy name for tiny programs that self-execute and run natively on a blockchain) need a complete instruction set.

Script allows the creation of something called Atomic Swaps, however. You might have noticed that Bitcoin developers are almost as creative as Apple’s marketing department in finding awe-inspiring names for their products. Avoiding undue technicality here, Atomic Swaps allow Bitcoin to be exchanged with coins of other blockchains such as Litecoin or Ethereum in one transaction and without intermediaries. The exact mechanism involves Hash Time Locked Contracts and is beyond the scope of this research.

Only two projects offer decentralized financial services on top of Bitcoin — DeFiChain and Portal.finance.

DeFiChain

DeFiChain uses an intelligent way to secure transactions on its own chain by storing cryptographic representation to the Bitcoin blockchain every 30 minutes. DeFiChain’s own network is fast and tailored to decentralized finance by expanding Bitcoin’s Script language just enough to allow building, lending, staking and tokenizing functionality without becoming Turing complete and compromising on security.

DeFiChain went live in 2020 and introduced the ability to create digital tokens from stocks in November 2021. Users can currently get up to 400% APR when providing liquidity with Tesla, Google and other stocks in pairs with stablecoins.

The download of a proprietary wallet is necessary to participate. Thanks to rapid innovation and its clever security mechanics, DeFiChain has attracted more than $1.8 billion of assets to its applications.

Total value locked in DeFi on Bitcoin

Portal.finance has not been released to the public yet. Investors can start a whitelisting process to participate in the creation, and Portal announced $650 million of funds pledged to its development. 

DeFiChain is the only running layer-two decentralized exchange on Bitcoin, and the total value locked (TVL) on Bitcoin is the same — $1.8 billion. Watching out for Portal’s start and traction is recommended for anyone interested in this unique space.

Summary

Seen in a more poetic way, Bitcoin seems like the wise grandfather of modern cryptocurrencies. And while it may be considered old-fashioned, its stringent adherence to core values makes it inherently trustworthy and commands great authority.

DeFi has arrived on top of Bitcoin. While Ethereum allows native financial decentralized applications (DApp), transaction fees for providing liquidity to exchange pools have frequently exceeded $100 and occasionally topped $1,000. Layer-two solutions on top of Ethereum are all the rave now, so there’s no reason to think of layer-two DeFi as “less real” than layer one.

Bitcoin is still a valid synonym for crypto as a whole, and Taproot, Lightning Network, and layer-two DeFi mean it is more than just the first cryptocurrency, it is still a formidable competitor for the blockchain foundation of the global decentralized finance market.

This article is an extract from the 80+ page Scaling Report: Does the Future of Decentralized Finance Still Belong to Ethereum? co-published by the Crypto Research Report and Cointelegraph Consulting, written by ten authors and supported by Arcana, Brave, ANote Music, Radix, Fuse, Cryptix, Casper Labs, Coinfinity, Ambire, BitPanda and CakeDEFI.

Cointelegraph Research Report: Why Crypto Funds Are Investing in Dash

A new crypto fund report published by Cointelegraph Research investigates how the Dash protocol’s innovative design provides security benefits to its users, as well as a thorough examination of the tokenomics and value proposition. The report highlights how investors can participate in Dash, and what future possibilities for users and developers will emerge from Dash’s upcoming developments.

Cointelegraph Research presents facts and figures on all aspects of Dash in collaboration with multiple research partners including Allnodes, Staking Rewards, CryptoRefills, CoinRoutes, intotheblock, Bitwise, Santiment, and Rekt Capital. Dash’s unique features as a payment solution including its role as an asset for investments are examined. The report is intended for investors who want to learn more about the cryptocurrency.

Dash’s evolution will achieve a major milestone in 2022. With the launch of the Dash Platform on mainnet, developers and users will be able to take full advantage of a complete ecosystem for decentralized applications and data storage.

Link to Download the full report here, complete with charts and infographics

Cointelegraph’s Crypto Fund Survey Research

An original survey of over 2,000 crypto funds was conducted in 2021 to gain a better understanding of how investors feel about Dash. This 80+ page report, written by five authors from around the world, shows which funds currently hold Dash as well as the number of funds that plan to invest in Dash over the next year.

The 200 funds that participated in the survey manage an estimated total of $1.2 billion in cryptocurrency and blockchain investments. The survey revealed that:

  • 20 funds already have Dash exposure in their investment portfolio.
  • An additional 40 funds indicated their intention to invest in Dash within the next 12 months.
  • 70% of the survey respondents requested to receive the results of this crypto fund report.

The study revealed these 20 asset allocators reported that they already have exposure to Dash in their investment portfolio including Digital Capital Management, Liquibit Limited, BN Capital, Postera Capital, Blockwall Capital, Hilbert Capital, Smart Block Laboratory, Asymmetry Asset Management, Resilience AG, Pecun.io, All Blue Capital, INDX Capital, EZCAMG, Plutus21 Capital, How2Ventures, Block Ventures, Parallax Digital, Bohr Arbitrage Crypto Fund, and Valkyrie.

Dash has distinguished itself from Bitcoin and other blockchains by emerging as one of the most prominent digital currencies focused on payments, i.e., becoming digital cash. The report not only explains how Dash’s masternode solution has helped to improve network scalability, but also elaborates on the regulatory environment for Dash and other cryptocurrencies in the world’s largest jurisdictions.

“As far as I know, there’s no other project that comes close to what we’re trying to build which is the ability to efficiently query information directly from the system database to users. We’ve seen a lot of DApps that store information on other blockchains, but they all require the use of oracles for their system to work. Dash Platform is going to be much more decentralized. Users on their mobile devices will be querying DAPI directly. There’s no oracle between them, users can query the blockchain directly with decentralized cryptographic proofs that the information is valid. You don’t have to trust any server. In my opinion, it will be a new paradigm of how decentralized systems can work.”

Sam Westrich, CTO at Dash Core Group

Aside from Dash’s vision and general features, the report delves into tokenomics, price performance, future development roadmap, and regulation. This report also outlines how Dash remains an innovative cryptocurrency that has evolved from a scalable payment solution to a Web3 ecosystem.

“Dash is a well-known, respected name in the payments space in many areas of the world, and has an engaged, loyal following. One of our goals at Valkyrie is to enable those underserved by traditional financial firms to have access to financial services, and expanding investment into the Dash ecosystem is part of that mission.”

Leah Wald, CEO at Valkyrie Investments

According to Cointelegraph Research, any amount of Dash can improve a traditional equity and bond portfolio by strengthening not only the cumulative return but also the sharpe ratio. Dash’s low correlation to traditional asset classes like equities and gold can also help investors manage their risk.

Link to Download the full report here, complete with charts and infographics

Layer-two solutions to Bitcoin’s scalability

Six confirmations for a bitcoin payment means about 60 minutes of waiting time and even just one confirmation of 10 minutes would still be a long wait for a coffee, luckily there are approaches to solve this problem!

Since Nakamoto wanted to design an electronic cash system, his successors had to think about possible solutions to Bitcoin’s scalability problem. If BTC intends to be used for payments, multi-dollar transaction fees and hours-long wait times could not be tolerated.

After Bitcoin miners rejected a proposal to increase Bitcoin’s block size to 2 megabytes in May 2017, Bitcoin Cash was created as a hard fork of Bitcoin Core. In a hard fork, every holder of coins on the parent chain also holds coins of the offspring, but the blockchains diverge after that. Sometimes, most miners decide to ditch the older chain, and it fades into oblivion. But that was not the case with Bitcoin Cash, whose acceptance remains far below Bitcoin to this day. Bitcoin Cash can achieve 350 TPS, which is a welcomed improvement but still a far cry from real-world demands. The Visa network processes up to 56,000 TPS on busy shopping days. 

Thankfully, a few clever developers found a solution and introduced the Lightning Network(1) in 2016, officially launching it in 2018.

The Lightning Network

The Lightning Network white paper was released on Jan. 14, 2016, and written by Joseph Poon and Thaddeus Dryja. Since then, Lightning Labs’ team has made steady progress under CEO Elizabeth Stark. 

Lightning specifies a peer-to-peer payment system on top of Bitcoin using payment channels. The mechanism is simple and elegant:

  1. Alice tops up her Lightning payment channel to Bob with BTC (first on-chain transaction).
  2. Alice sends Bob a transaction.
  3. Alice can send Bob as many other transactions as she wants until her funds are depleted.
  4. Alice and Bob agree on the total paid and close the payment channel (second on-chain transaction).

The fee for sending a Lightning transaction is zero if a direct connection exists between the parties. Lightning can also route a payment through many hops. The transaction propagates like, well, Lightning in the sky until it reaches its desired recipient. Hops charge minuscule fees, often fractions of 1 Satoshi, for their services in providing the necessary liquidity.

The Lightning Network is like a social network for payments. Since each hop can only facilitate less than what they topped up, network capacity can become an issue for large transactions. Mercifully, 2021 saw exponential network capacity growth, exceeding 3,000 BTC (~$150 million) in October 2021.

Figure: Visualisation of the Lightning Network

Source: Acinq

In December 2021, there were more than 17,100 Lightning nodes worldwide, most of which in the United States and the European Union. These nodes have more than 77,000 open payment channels. Lightning wallets for iOS and Android have matured enough to be usable by regular users. And in Venezuela, savvy residents shop with BTC.

It has never been easier to buy a coffee with Bitcoin. This is something that has come just in time, especially for the inhabitants of the Latin American country of El Salvador!

1 See “What is the Lightning Network in Bitcoin and how does it work?”, Cointelegraph

This article is an extract from the 80+ page Scaling Report: Does the Future of Decentralized Finance Still Belong to Ethereum? co-published by the Crypto Research Report and Cointelegraph Consulting, written by ten authors and supported by Arcana, Brave, ANote Music, Radix, Fuse, Cryptix, Casper Labs, Coinfinity, Ambire, BitPanda and CakeDEFI.

Bitrefill’s New Bill Payments Make Living on Crypto in the United States a Reality

Living on cryptocurrency in the United States has become a reality thanks to Bitrefill’s crypto bill payments.

Through Bitrefill’s new Bill Payments service, US citizens can now pay any bill in the US with Bitcoin, Ethereum, Dash, Dogecoin, Litecoin, and USDT on Ethereum & Tron, as well as 50 other altcoins and stablecoins.

The service works for taxes, credit card bills, utilities, auto loans, healthcare, mortgage, social security, and 20,000 other forms of expenses.

Bill payments are a game changer for people who make money with cryptocurrency by trading, working from home, or selling their goods and services to others in exchange for cryptocurrency. You may now pay for almost everything with crypto without ever touching a government-issued national currency.

“They say there are only two certain things in life – death and taxes. now you can pay both your tax and funeral costs with crypto.”

Sergej Kotliar, CEO of Bitrefill

Bitrefill requires users to have an ID-verified account with a US residency to use this service. Bitrefill is rolling out bill payments with a waiting list, which is first come, first served. In the blog post announcement, Bitrefill stated they are working around the clock to make their new service available to every Bitrefill customer in the United States, but it’ll take some time.

Bitrefill will apply a 2% convenience fee on the total bill paid to cover the costs of paying and processing each bill payment.

The new service will also be available in Bitrefill’s iOS and Android apps.

Transaction capacity of Bitcoin without layer 2

Because Bitcoin is a peer-to-peer electronic cash system, users should be able to pay for the purchase of coffee or pizza with Bitcoin. We will take a closer look at the difficulties and solutions in the next few articles.

This article on transaction speed will explain why Bitcoin cannot facilitate these kinds of transactions on a large scale on its own. Transaction fees and transaction times make it impossible to pay with BTC at the local deli. Fees are auction-based. Miners include the most lucrative transactions in their version of the next block, so transaction senders need to include a large enough payment to have their transaction processed quickly — otherwise, they will have to wait. During price crashes, when everyone and their dog wants to sell BTC at once, prices are at a premium, and desperate sellers bid $100 or more for transaction fees. Recently, fees have oscillated between $1 and $3.

Figure 1: Bitcoin transaction fees rarely breached the $3 mark in Q4 2021

Source: CoinMetrics

Bitcoin transactions are still much cheaper than Ethereum’s, where simple transactions routinely cost more than $10, but the lower price is a sign of less demand, too. A $1 transaction fee is still too much for a coffee purchase. 

Theoretical transactions per second (TPS) on the Bitcoin network

Bitcoin transactions consist of information about the senders, the recipients and the amount, plus some security information. Since a Bitcoin block cannot be larger than 1 megabyte in total, it can include a maximum of 3,500 average-sized transactions. This boils down to a maximum of 5.83 TPS, as a block is mined every 10 minutes.

Some blocks contain smaller transactions, and miners now process Segregated Witness transactions, which optimize space inside a block, making up to 7 TPS possible.

Average transactions per second

Since Bitcoin transactions are slow, somewhat expensive, and faster blockchains exist, the number of actual transactions on Bitcoin rarely reaches the theoretical maximum. In October 2021, the protocol processed 3.18 TPS on average.

The Bitcoin protocol was a bit more active during most of 2020 with 3.85 TPS on average but saw a downturn in usage during the May 2021 crash, from which it has only partly recovered — a fact that is visible in the amount of blockspace used. Blocks are rarely more than half full in the second half of 2021.

Figure 2: Full capacity blocks until July 2021 and only half capacity later

Source:Coinmetrics

Time to finality for Bitcoin Core

Transactions are considered final after they are confirmed three to six times, depending on security requirements. The reasoning behind this is that alternatives could still overtake one block, but the effort needed to write a longer chain and catch up with more than three or six blocks is enormous. 

Six confirmations mean a minimum of 60 minutes until finality. Just two confirmations mean between 10.1 and 20 minutes of waiting time before a merchant would be wise to accept a BTC payment. That’s a long wait for a coffee.

In order to realize Nakamoto’s idea of an “electronic cash system,” his successors had to think about possible solutions to Bitcoin’s scalability problem. One of these solutions is the Lightning network, which is considered the most important layer 2 solution.

This article is an extract from the 80+ page Scaling Report: Does the Future of Decentralized Finance Still Belong to Ethereum? co-published by the Crypto Research Report and Cointelegraph Consulting, written by ten authors and supported by Arcana, Brave, ANote Music, Radix, Fuse, Cryptix, Casper Labs, Coinfinity, Ambire, BitPanda and CakeDEFI.

Bitcoin’s Script & Taproot

Using “hashcash” and other cryptographic approaches, Nakamoto found an ingenious and novel way to set financial incentives in such a way that fraud always leads to more losses than gains. But Bitcoin’s development did not end there!

Bitcoin’s Script programming language

Satoshi Nakamoto foresaw the need for programs to efficiently interact with the Bitcoin blockchain and developed the “Script” programming language.

Script has limited functionality compared to Ethereum’s Solidity or general-purpose languages, such as Rust, used by Solana. The main limitation is that Script prevents programs from looping. Loops are helpful for enumerations or working through datasets, but they can be used to empty wallets quickly in a series of smaller transactions.

Ethereum got to know what the vicious downsides of loops can entail when “The DAO heist” enabled a hacker to steal a large portion of all Ether (ETH) from a poorly designed smart contract.

This limitation makes Script “Turing Incomplete,” a fancy name for not having as many instructions as a general-purpose language. Turing incompleteness makes Bitcoin much more secure because it limits the potential for nasty bugs; however, it hinders what can be developed. There will never be native NFTs or DeFi applications on the Bitcoin network. Clever developers have had to create more complex solutions built atop Bitcoin for security but process elsewhere, so-called layer-two solutions.

Bitcoin Core developers have not been sleeping in the meantime and updated Script to Tapscript with the Taproot upgrade, which allows more complex transactions.

The Taproot update to Bitcoin Core

The “Block wars” over Bitcoin’s block size in 2017 left a deep and lasting wound on developers and stifled innovation. Bitcoin’s Taproot update is as much a healing process as it is a big step forward for the network’s technology.

Updates used to need a one-year announcement period during which miners could signify their approval. The “Speedy Trial” overlay in the Bitcoin Improvement Proposal (BIP) 8 reduced this timeframe to three months.

After the third try, 90% of miners signalled approval of BIP-340 and BIP-342, known as the Taproot update, on June 12, 2021. The update was locked in on Nov. 14 and went live without a hitch. The corresponding software updates to nodes propagated through the network in the months afterwards.

Taproot features two significant upgrades:

  1. Schnorr signatures: Replacing ECDSA signatures, Schnorr’s algorithm allows keys to sign transactions in aggregate. Bitcoin becomes more private this way because transactions signed by multiple parties are indistinguishable from single-signer transactions. They also enable Bitcoin scripts to sign transactions, expanding the possibilities of Bitcoin native programs.
  2. Tapscript: Expands the functionality of the Script programming language to facilitate more complex transaction conditions, helping the Lightning Network and other layer-two solutions become more private and efficient.

Most importantly of all, Bitcoin developers may have found a new confidence in their ability to innovate and fully support miners.

This confidence is key to keeping Bitcoin relevant with meaningful innovation in the future.

This article is an extract from the 80+ page Scaling Report: Does the Future of Decentralized Finance Still Belong to Ethereum? co-published by the Crypto Research Report and Cointelegraph Consulting, written by ten authors and supported by Arcana, Brave, ANote Music, Radix, Fuse, Cryptix, Casper Labs, Coinfinity, Ambire, BitPanda and CakeDEFI.

The Bitcoin Consensus Mechanism

The Bitcoin core developers have proven cautious about making changes to the foundation created by Nakamoto. Back in 2016/2017, when it took six days for transactions to settle, some users demanded a remedy in the form of larger block sizes to allow for more transactions per second.

This proposal did not meet developer support or miner acceptance. The situation became untenable for some, and Bitcoin Cash was born as a result of this confrontation. Bitcoin Cash increased the block size eightfold and can process up to 250 transactions per second (TPS).

How Bitcoin miners agree on transactions

Bitcoin uses the proof-of-work (PoW) consensus, which was first implemented in Hashcash. PoW forces miners to try quintillions of different numbers (called nonces), which get appended to the data in a block, and are then hashed using the SHA256 cryptographic function. The resulting hash is 256 bit (32 characters) long and changes radically with even the slightest alteration of the underlying data.

Hashing is a sound way to make data tamper-proof. The Bitcoin protocol only accepts hashes with a certain number of leading “0” characters. Since SHA256 is a unidirectional function, miners cannot work backwards from the desired hash to a fitting nonce but must try different numbers until one produces the desired result.

The number of leading 0s is set to such a length that all the miners in the world combined can only compute one block every 10 minutes on average. This is Bitcoin’s block time.

The Bitcoin hash rate is a measure of network security — currently at 185 EH/s (185*10^18)

Every block is linked to the block before, hence the moniker “blockchain.” Other miners verify a submitted block to ensure the same coins are not sent twice, or from an address a user doesn’t control. Only if they agree can a miner claim their rewards. Fraudulent activity means doing all the calculations in vain and wasted work.

Miners follow the longest possible chain of blocks. If an alternative version is proposed, it would need to recalculate all the blocks from the point of deviation onwards and overtake the main chain to write a different transaction history, known as a 51% attack, because the attacker would need the majority of the entire network’s hashing power to succeed. Hackers could use such an attack to reroute payments and empty wallets without controlling their private keys. 

Since the Bitcoin Core network currently has an astounding 185 quintillion hashes per second capacity, it is not economically possible to mount such an attack.

This article is an extract from the 80+ page Scaling Report: Does the Future of Decentralized Finance Still Belong to Ethereum? co-published by the Crypto Research Report and Cointelegraph Consulting, written by ten authors and supported by Arcana, Brave, ANote Music, Radix, Fuse, Cryptix, Casper Labs, Coinfinity, Ambire, BitPanda and CakeDEFI.

Real-World Use and Adoption of Bitcoin

Bitcoin’s market capitalization has been above $1 trillion since February 2021, although it briefly dipped below that mark during the May 2021 downturn. But what about other metrics in regards to Bitcoins use and growth? In this article we will take a look at them!

Unique Bitcoin addresses

Bitcoin addresses are created by calculating a public and private key pair that conforms to the protocol’s specifications. The private key can then unlock the funds associated with its corresponding addresses, which is mathematically derived from the private key. 

The address only becomes publicly visible when funds have been sent. Before, it only existed as a possibility. Theoretically, another user could generate the same private key but with infinitesimally slim chances. Bitcoin’s pay-to-public-key hash address format can have a total of 1.4 * 10^48 possible addresses.

Looking at active addresses is more relevant for this comparison. Around 800,000 active Bitcoin addresses exist as of December 2021. In the last six months, the number grew 25% but is still not back to the peak of 1 million active addresses registered in January 2021.

Figure 3: Bitcoin active addresses fluctuate around 800,000

Source: Messari.io

The 100 richest Bitcoin addresses control around 15% of all BTC. Some of those haven’t moved their coins in years. Hodl (Hold On to your coins for Dear Life) culture is a strong force behind the digital asset.

Bitcoin protocol revenue and price-to-sales ratio

Miner revenue comes in the form of transaction fees and block rewards. Since Bitcoin’s protocol can only process seven transactions per second, fee revenue is a fraction of block rewards. Except for short bursts of intense interest, transaction fees rarely cross the 3% threshold of miner profits. 

Figure 4: Transaction fees as a percentage of block rewards. 40% spike in Jan 2018, 25% in May 2021

Source: CoinMetrics

In 2021, transaction fees were just short of $450 million. Bitcoin’s market capitalization is 2,200 times more than transaction fees, but just 70 times more than block rewards and transaction fees combined, assuming an average price of $43,000 per BTC. Solana, for comparison, has a P/S multiple of 30,909x.

Staking and lending rates for BTC

Thanks to the wonders of decentralized finance, precious Bitcoin can be put to work. Flexible staking can yield up to 6% rewards on Celsius. Locking withdrawals for 90 days can increase yields to 7.5% on Binance Earn.

Bitcoin can be bridged to the Ethereum network, controlled by a smart contract called Wrapped Bitcoin (wBTC). This wBTC can, in turn, be lent to Aave, but it currently yields less than 0.25% interest due to immense liquidity and little demand — a bullish signal representing investor faith.

DeFiChain(1), a DeFi application secured on the Bitcoin blockchain, offers up to 106% yield when providing liquidity to its exchange pools. Rewards are paid out in DFI, the project’s native coin.

Bitcoin initial coin distribution breakdown

Bitcoin has never had any initial coin distribution. Satoshi Nakamoto set up a Bitcoin node on his computer and at least one other and started mining blocks as a background process.

While the competition to mine blocks escalated rapidly and soon led to the use of dedicated mining hardware(2), the only “initial coin distribution” was the first-mover advantage that Nakamoto had. Research by the BitMEX(3) exchange attributes between 600,000 to 700,000 BTC to the mysterious founder entity. None of these coins have ever moved from their original addresses. 

Only 2.8%–3.5% of all BTC belong to the founder, and they’ve never sold a single coin — a display of strength and purity of principle.

  1. More information about Decentralized Exchanges here
  2. Learn more about Antminer here
  3. Does Satoshi have a million bitcoin? | BitMEX Blog

This article is an extract from the 80+ page Scaling Report: Does the Future of Decentralized Finance Still Belong to Ethereum? co-published by the Crypto Research Report and Cointelegraph Consulting, written by ten authors and supported by Arcana, Brave, ANote Music, Radix, Fuse, Cryptix, Casper Labs, Coinfinity, Ambire, BitPanda and CakeDEFI.

Bitcoin and DeFi

Bitcoin’s design has specific limitations that make much of what Ethereum’s goals are impossible. However, these very limitations make Bitcoin more secure and stable. In a more poetic way, you could say that Bitcoin is the wise grandfather of modern cryptocurrencies. And although it comes across as old-fashioned, its principled nature makes it trustworthy and gives it a natural authority.

Bitcoin is the mother of all blockchains and still the largest crypto asset. Due to limited programmability, decentralized finance (DeFi) and non-fungible tokens (NFT) are only available on Bitcoin’s layer-two solutions. DeFiChain and the Lightning Network show that Bitcoin may be able to capture some of the DeFi market.

Going back to Day 1, someone or a group of persons with the pseudonym “Satoshi Nakamoto” created Bitcoin. The network went live on the Jan. 3, 2009, implementing the seminal white paper “Bitcoin: A Peer-To-Peer Electronic Cash System”(1) that was published a few months earlier in 2008.

Satoshi Nakamoto released his genius white paper in 2008

Leaning on previous research from Hashcash and others, Nakamoto found a genius and novel way to set economic incentives in such a way that fraud always leads to more loss than gain. Central authorities become unnecessary, and participants can interact with the network without knowing about other participants. Bitcoin is called “trustless” for that reason. 

The cryptocurrency sparked a revolution in thinking about financial transactions, economic incentives and collaboration that bloomed into a $2.5-trillion industry in just the next 12 years.

Completely open-source and maintained by a tiny group of core developers, who work on a pro-bono basis and are financed with donations, the Bitcoin blockchain has never suffered any global outage in its existence and now secures more than $1 trillion in assets. Its codebase, Bitcoin Core, has been cloned 105 times to create copycats and alternatives(2). Bitcoin Cash and Bitcoin Satoshi’s Vision are noteworthy; others were quick grabs for investor attention and pre-mined tokens — aka scams.

Bitcoin’s price and market capitalization

One of the best investments in the last decade was buying Bitcoin early. Initially traded for cents per BTC, the price exploded to more than $68,800 in November 2021. 

The Bitcoin community still celebrates its humble beginnings with the “Bitcoin pizza day” on May 22, the day that a young engineer named Laszlo Hanyecz paid a fellow user 10,000 BTC for two Papa John’s pizzas.

BTC’s price grew from $0.06 to $68,800 in 12 years

Bitcoin is a deflationary token, and only 21 million BTC will ever exist. New Bitcoin is created as a reward for miners finding a solution to computation-intensive cryptographical problems. The first to submit such a solution in the form of a fully formed Bitcoin block (a package of transaction data) receives a reward in the form of newly minted coins. On average, one block is discovered every 10 minutes and currently yields a 6.25-BTC reward.

Nakamoto laid out a plan to incentivize early adopters. From block 0 to block 210,000, every block received 50 BTC. The following 210,000 blocks got half of that, or 25 BTC, and so on until the most recent “Bitcoin halving” on May 11, 2020, which halved the block reward to 6.25 BTC. The next halving is in 2024, and each subsequent halving will happen every 210,000 blocks, or approximately every four years, until miners mine the last Bitcoin in 2140. Bitcoin is currently inflationary and will remain so for the next 123 years, albeit at decreasing inflation levels.

As of December 2021, 18.9 million BTC is in circulation(3), and 328,500 (~900 each day) is mined each year, an effective inflation rate of 1.7%. Bitcoin’s market capitalization has been above $1 trillion since February 2021, although it briefly dipped below that mark during the May 2021 downturn.

  1.  See “Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System”, Satoshi Nakamoto, Bitcoin.org
  2.  Learn more about Bitcoin Fork Count here
  3. See “How Many Bitcoins Are There Now in Circulation?”, Buy Bitcoin Worldwide

This article is an extract from the 80+ page Scaling Report: Does the Future of Decentralized Finance Still Belong to Ethereum? co-published by the Crypto Research Report and Cointelegraph Consulting, written by ten authors and supported by Arcana, Brave, ANote Music, Radix, Fuse, Cryptix, Casper Labs, Coinfinity, Ambire, BitPanda and CakeDEFI.

What Is Decentralized Finance (DeFi)?

DeFi allows individuals to trade digital assets quickly, efficiently, and in a way that is settled because of the actions of programmed code, not because of a centralized entity. This allows for borrowing, lending, trading, collateralization, and payments, none of which requires permission from an outside authority.

One of the greatest applications of blockchain technology is in the realm of finance. As of this writing, the total value of all cryptocurrencies sits just below $2 trillion. One of the reasons for the expanse in the market capitalization of cryptocurrencies is decentralized finance or DeFi. DeFi continues to see a steady increase in users, and at the end of 2021, the total value locked (TVL) was more than $250 billion for all DeFi projects. Capital is flowing into DeFi from not only retail but also institutional investors, and worldwide adoption of cryptocurrencies is only in its infancy.

In the past, banks, investment services, insurance companies, and lenders would fall under the umbrella of finance for both the individual and businesses alike. Blockchain technology made it possible to provide the financial instruments which were offered by traditional finance (TradFi), which historically is characterized by centralized power, participation only by permission, high barriers to entry, and by “their rules.”

Decentralized Finance (DeFi) turns TradFi on its head.

DeFi is permissionless – In Defi, there is no middle man that stands between two or more people to make an agreement. This gives power back to individuals over institutions holding the power. It does not require a credit score or personal information to be exchanged. Just participants in peer-to-peer (P2P) transactions, interacting over computer code in a “trustless” manner (meaning the code ensures the transaction occurs, not just trusting another person).

DeFi is a global phenomenon – decentralized exchanges (DEXs) operate 365 days a year, 24 hours a day. There is no institution that limits hours of operation, no government regulation, and no governance needed other than that of the participants themselves. There are no state borders in DeFi. This allows for people who would never have the chance to invest in a yield-bearing financial tool in the TradFi space the ability to better their lives.

DeFi has low barriers to entry – DeFi does not require users to have entire “coins” of a particular blockchain to participate. Each cryptocurrency coin can be broken into tiny fractions of a whole, up to eight or even more decimal places! This means that anyone can start acquiring and utilizing different DeFi tools to better their position.

DeFi gives power back to the individual, allowing them to control their funds 24 hours every day of the year. People can decide to store their funds in non-custodial wallets, meaning they alone hold the private keys to unlock the use of these funds.

  1. Learn more about top-100 market capitalization coins here
  2. See “DeFi: A comprehensive guide to decentralized finance”, Cointelegraph
  3. See “3 key metrics show DeFi’s TVL on the verge of a new ATH”, Jordan Finneseth, Cointelegraph, January 5, 2022
  4. See “Grayscale sets sights on institutional DeFi fund”, Osato Avan-Nomayo, Cointelegraph, July 19, 2021
  5. See “The 2021 Global Crypto Adoption Index: Worldwide Adoption Jumps Over 880% With P2P Platforms Driving Cryptocurrency Usage in Emerging Markets”, Chainanalysis, October 14, 2021
  6. See “How to store crypto in 2022, explained”, Sarah Jensen, Cointelegraph, December 27, 2021

This article is an extract from the 80+ page Scaling Report: Does the Future of Decentralized Finance Still Belong to Ethereum? co-published by the Crypto Research Report and Cointelegraph Consulting, written by ten authors and supported by Arcana, Brave, ANote Music, Radix, Fuse, Cryptix, Casper Labs, Coinfinity, Ambire, BitPanda and CakeDEFI.

Tokens will do to contracts, what email did to letters

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Nowadays, it seems normal that most business conversations are conducted via email. When it was first invented in 1971, or even when it was made available through a webmail service in 1994, hardly anyone would have expected it to be the norm for communication instead of letters.

Practitioner Perspective with Katharina Gehra of Immutable Insight, GmbH

Today, very few expect tokens to be the norm for binding agreements rather than contracts. However, we are convinced that the plethora of advantages of tokens versus contracting today, such as vastly increased security, lower cost, higher speed, easier and cheaper scalability, cross-border availability will undoubtedly lead to this paradigm shift.

Tokens will also develop into new scenarios that are not even thought of yet. Token design is open to exploit different approaches to business – in terms of services being offered, pricing models being adopted and ownership being defined. We are now seeing crypto tokens in the categories of utility, payment, and security token. There are at least four different sets of tokens that will be used in the near to mid-term future. The one that should be in the focus today are the ones that are neither crypto tokens, nor security tokens, nor tokenized existing assets such as bonds, but the ones that are hardest to describe because they are the least known and conceptualized yet. We’ll attempt to push into unchartered territory.

To start, let us have a look at what contracts mostly do today. When two or more parties want to interact reliably today, they are using elaborate contracts mostly written up by a specialized occupational group such as lawyers to define the matter, the scope, what happens if something that we can already imagine happening, happens and how we resolve a conflict if it may occur and has not been covered in this agreement yet. We also need to rely on the contractual party being the very contractual party and the signatory being able to make what the signature entails. In short, there is a lot of construction of eventualities and trying to mitigate execution risks in the process of the business itself.

What formal codified law or case law try to provide as a framework for such contracts, can be substituted by a framework for coding. Many lawyers and policymakers will disagree, some of them strongly, but while I am not saying it is there yet, I am still saying one form or the other, this will take precedence over our current system.

Why? The strongest force behind is the underlying economic logic. Today, most businesses act according to Price × Quantity = Revenue. And the quantity is directly or indirectly deduced from the number of people on the planet and the market needs they create. Tomorrow, token allow businesses where the multiplying quantity can entail not only human-related clients, but also machines and business processes that are entirely human free. If the number of potential clients is so much higher and for example by an automatization of a process the repetition of usage of a service is easier to predict for the future, even a minor fraction of price can lead to substantially more profitable new business models. It will create new types of platform business models, that make Google or Amazon’s platform scale look small.

Tokens will enable tokenization as a business logic that substitutes complex processes for the standardized version. Those new processes are by design very slim, straightforward, highly standardized, real-time actions with reliably proven identities for both the contractual parties and their respective signatories. Delivery, payment and record-keeping will all take place simultaneously and will be automated in the execution in order to decrease human involvement to the highest possible degree. This will lead to offerings so radically cheaper and more reliable, that it will outcompete the current offerings.

This change of execution reduces complexity dramatically to an extent where the cost effects and the speed of business will be so superior, that de facto the existing business modus operandi will fade out to a large extent.

And just as we still write letters under certain circumstances, so will single contracts still be produced and executed the old-fashioned way. If for now we assume that is the case in the future, the undeniable next question is: how do we get there most likely and maybe a little faster?

When Ethereum began to play a part in the blockchain universe in 2015 the whole notion of “the new internet” was introduced alongside it. It created the 2017 Initial Coin Offering (“ICO”) hype, but then this bubble burst and Ether and all tokens crashed subsequently.

After a cooling off period in 2018 and 2019, the models that were being initiated then started to show a higher level of seriousness and industrial grade application level. In 2019 security tokens (“STO”) were thought of being the new answer with some early issuances of prototypes, e.g., Bitbond in Germany. Before that model took off, in 2020 the wave of Decentralized Finance (“DeFi”) washed through the crypto scene and simply showed a stronger growth trajectory for Ethereum’s application landscape at this point in time.

However, both security tokens and DeFi center around some form of cryptocurrency or financial use case. And those are certainly good starting points. They show how to provide value-creating business models that are only possible for the fact that there is a blockchain as a platform that enables unique digital assets. Right now, most of the DeFi applications are still showing a strong resemblance to traditional finance. As soon as the Decentralized Finance model will develop and expand in somewhat unchartered territories with products and services being conceptually more advanced than traditional finance, we’ll be embarking on the journey to smarter and more competitive levels of tokens.

On the other side of the spectrum, traditional financial institutions are slowly but surely adopting security tokens. While Decentralized Finance develops products without a centralized issuer in the shape of tokens, traditional finance wraps their products in decentrally tradable security tokens. Bonds have been a very early version of it, but unfortunately those were more picture perfect, than below the surface perfect. The second round of security tokens, often originating from a real estate financing perspective, learned the lesson, but still rely on a quite traditional approach. Real estate today is defined by bigger ticket sizes, relatively little liquidity and high transaction cost. Beyond the two aspects where a token can immediately compete, i.e. potential fractionalization of ownership and easier tradability of the token itself, we also need an adoption of underlying registries. That will at this time create friction and thereby lessen the advantages of the standardized, scale approach which the tokens represent.

Rather than the real-estate or bond sectors, other areas have been discussed before and they might be easier tokenized at first. That might be rare special goods, such as fine art or old timer cars that usually are traded with low liquidity, little transparency and a strong dependency on a few reputable market makers such as specialized car dealers or art galleries. These assets are not so much hinged on existing registrar systems and are potentially also more open to the gamification aspect that tokens also can entail by design.

There might be some features of tokenization that have a stronger USP in more liquid markets. For example, in stock or commodity trading, the local time zone and opening hours of an exchange still play a significant role. Here a tokenized asset could build momentum on the fact that trading is possible 24 hours per day, 365 days per year. The higher availability can be superior to trading strategies that more and more are focusing on speed and higher turn-over, where also the transaction cost plays a role. Also, traditional patterns will be broken up – endangering some investors, enabling others at the same time.

While the former examples are still a little bit like training a horse to be faster, they all remain a horse with its innate limitations. The game changes as soon as from the mindset of “breeding a faster horse” we innovate into a “horse-power engine” that will jump start and exceed any horse-like limitations and whose speed is outcompeting any existing model.

So what is the engine going to look like? In my perspective, the tokenization will start by understanding the demand of the new client category: machines. Most of our business thinking has centered around catering human needs (aka “breeding a horse”). Our thinking needs to put the machines, servers, cars, utilities into our client focus. How machines produced cheaper and faster are serving their purpose longer and more cost effective, and how in the end are they being recycled more sustainably? How is the financing determined cheaper in light of the new cash flow projections of machines having machines as their client for a pre-determined demand? What type of real estate, logistics, supply chain implications will that have? What about legal ownership? At this point in time, we certainly have more questions than answers to these topics.

In an age of the emergence of knowledge, of the frequent interdisciplinary application of solutions – the combination of network effects, biomechanics, power efficiency, Internet of Things, blockchain and a new way of thinking about business models in combination with token design -to name only a few will create innovation faster than most people expect today. And tokens will have substituted contracts, much faster than it took email to replace letters.

Due to the numerous benefits tokenization offers, an improved regulatory environment, and strong interest from industry players, the future looks very bright for the STO market.

This article is an extract from the 90+ page Security Token Report 2021 co-published by the Crypto Research Report and Cointelegraph Consulting, written by thirteen authors and supported by Crypto Finance, Blocklabs Capital Management, HyperTrader, Ten31 Bank, Stadler Völkel Attorneys at Law, Riddle&Code, Coinfinity, Bitpanda Pro, Tokeny Solutions, AlgoTrader, and Elevated Returns.

How will the market for Security Tokens develop?

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By 2030, most securities will be tokenized. In an exclusive interview with Raiffeisen Bank International, Raiffeisen states that the way we trade securities today will be gone within 10 years. Even though Raiffeisen reports that the majority of investors are not currently asking for exposure to securities tokens, investors are starting to demand a trading experience for stocks similar to cryptocurrencies. Investors want transparency, liquidity and instant settlement. The transition to trading all assets based on distributed ledger technology is inevitable.

In 2020, the market for security tokens grew by 517% to $366 million total and the daily trading volume grew by over 1,000%. Real estate produced the greatest number of STOs and raised the highest amount of money. Recent notable institutional STOs include the Bank of China, the Bank of Thailand, the Austrian government, and HSBC. To date the United States has led the world with the highest number of STOs followed by Switzerland. Growth in the STO market has continued during 2021 with the total market cap now at $700 million.

Currently, the market for security token trading is a competitive one with banks, traditional exchanges, startup token exchanges, cryptocurrency exchanges, and decentralized exchanges all vying to capture market share. Unfortunately, liquidity for tokens is low with the most active exchange transacting just under $6.3 million in monthly volume as of January 2021.

Thus far institutional investors have been reluctant to participate due to lack of liquidity. In spite of this current predicament, there’s optimism the secondary market will substantially improve in the near future as the regulatory framework surrounding security tokens becomes more robust.

Regulation has been a challenge both for the regulators and the STO industry. The global regulatory position on STOs varies considerably from country to country ranging from illegal in China to supportive in nations such as Switzerland. Meanwhile, regulations have also been a challenge for STO industry players. The primary challenge for them has been ambiguity in regulatory requirements.

Understandably, ambiguity in the rules has been a hindrance on the industry since companies have been reluctant to invest heavily while the precise rules they’re supposed to operate under are unknown. New legislation, such as the Swiss DLT Act, seeks to provide a framework for both regulators and the STO industry to operate under. Additionally, as time goes by judicial rulings will provide further clarity for both regulators and industry participants.

Due to the numerous advantages tokenization offers, an improved regulatory environment, and robust interest from industry players the future looks very bright for the STO market. It is estimated that the tokenized asset market may grow to as much as $9.5 trillion by 2025. In the long-run, it’s not difficult to envision STOs fully replacing the current securities market. As typewriters yielded to computers, the natural evolution of this industry points to STOs being the way of the future.

Where can you find out more about security tokens?

While writing this report, we realized that few resources exist for investors who wish to learn more about issuing security tokens investing in security tokens. We found the following immensely helpful in our quest for information on the security token industry:

This article is an extract from the 90+ page Security Token Report 2021 co-published by the Crypto Research Report and Cointelegraph Consulting, written by thirteen authors and supported by Crypto Finance, Blocklabs Capital Management, HyperTrader, Ten31 Bank, Stadler Völkel Attorneys at Law, Riddle&Code, Coinfinity, Bitpanda Pro, Tokeny Solutions, AlgoTrader, and Elevated Returns.