{"id":151,"date":"2022-11-11T01:08:31","date_gmt":"2022-11-11T01:08:31","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/milkyeggs.com\/?p=151"},"modified":"2023-10-30T22:53:58","modified_gmt":"2023-10-30T22:53:58","slug":"the-doomer-case-for-the-final-death-of-crypto","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/milkyeggs.com\/crypto\/the-doomer-case-for-the-final-death-of-crypto\/","title":{"rendered":"The doomer case for the final death of crypto"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
I have been in a state of mild shock and disbelief ever since I woke up on Tuesday morning, rolled over in bed, opened Twitter on my phone, and saw the news of FTX’s insolvency. At that moment, in a deep and fundamental way, unlike with any of the insane crashes or blowups that had happened so far in 2022, I felt my outlook for crypto immediately shift in a pessimistic direction. I now believe that the probability that crypto enters a slow and irreversible decline from which it never<\/em> recovers has dramatically increased.<\/p>\n\n\n\n I would like to lay out the case for this maximally pessimistic scenario and write down why I think that the collapse of FTX and Alameda Research make it far likelier than it was a week ago. I am not saying that I am necessarily wrong or right; in the end, predicting the future is nearly impossible, and if Bitcoin or Ethereum hit new all-time highs in the next decade, I am sure people will come and laugh at me. I will probably also be laughing at myself (while crying over the fact that I capitulated at the rock bottom). This post should be read as an exercise in reflection, an attempt to pick up the pieces and formulate one concrete picture of what the future might look like. Perhaps none of this will happen! Perhaps crypto will blossom into the foundations of a new financial system based on transparency and equal access! But even if you’re bullish, shouldn’t you try to think through the worst case scenarios?<\/p>\n\n\n\n Well, without further ado, everyone loves a bit of baseless prognostication, so…<\/p>\n\n\n\n The basic doomer thesis<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n Basically, I think that something like the following is going to play out over the next couple months.<\/p>\n\n\n\n On the institutional and “builder” side:<\/p>\n\n\n\n On the retail side:<\/p>\n\n\n\n Much of this sounds, perhaps, like “generic bear market reasoning,” so to speak. However, I think that there are certain key points that people are ignoring or failing to properly appreciate. First, the shock and loss of credibility extends to the “highest levels.” With every single previous crypto market implosion\u30fceverything from OHM to the depegging of UST\u30fcthe people perceived to be the smartest and most competent operators in the field were unaffected. Sure, when the price of LUNA went down to zero, a bunch of degenerate Koreans got rinsed, but basically everyone I<\/em> personally knew was completely unaffected. Certainly nothing like Sequoia or Paradigm losing hundreds of millions of dollars happened.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Like it or not, these people bring both credibility and money to the space, whether we’re talking about a VC fund with a strong reputation in Silicon Valley or smart, quant-ish developers who see the technological potential of crypto and indirectly start to evangelize the long-term vision to their friends. This time, however, the losses extend far deeper than ever before. There has and always will be a “core group” of committed crypto diehards who never give up on the dream of decentralization, but never has that group suffered losses so severe as in the past week.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Sentiment is everything in crypto. Asset values, as well as user and developer interest, are notoriously reflexive. Just because there will be a nonzero number<\/em> of people left does not mean that we will ever be able to amass enough momentum to grow back into something larger. I mean, Ethereum may very well keep producing blocks for the rest of my life, and Africans or Ecuadoreans or Venezuelans or people from literal failed states<\/em> will always find some value in having access to crypto. It won’t literally disappear.<\/em> But it can get pretty close to disappearing relative to where it stands now, and there may no longer be enough people with enough faith to keep the flame alive for much longer.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Second, I believe people are underestimating the severity of the inevitable regulatory crackdown. We are not talking here about the failure of a shady quasi-bank like Celsius which targeted American consumers or the collapse of an algostable made by a South Korean developer. Instead, we are talking about the total failure of the singular man in crypto, Sam Bankman-Fried, known for making enormous political donations, testifying before Congress, and actively seeking to work with regulators to shape policy.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Perhaps you are skeptical that Gensler’s SEC really prioritizes the “protection” of US citizens. Perhaps you are skeptical that Congress itself cares much for the American people. I could not fault you too much for harboring some doubts. However, what I am<\/em> pretty sure about is that when you directly lie to these people<\/em>, they are going to get pretty angry, and that anger may have some very severe consequences for crypto as a whole. We are not talking about attempt #1982301 to steal Americans’ money via a thinly disguised Ponzi scheme; instead, we are talking about a blatant attempt to pull the rug over the eyes of the people in charge of this nation. Authority does not typically take well to such provocations.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Frankly, if you pressed me on it, would I be able to say that Congress is wrong<\/em> for wanting to regulate crypto? I think it would be quite challenging to make that assertion after fraud has been revealed at the highest levels and in the most unexpected quarters. Sure, theoretically,<\/em> crypto has some good use cases and benefits some parts of the world, but on net,<\/em> has it actually been anything but a huge money and productivity sink for American consumers? Not really. At this point, pleading that crypto might eventually<\/em> become a net good just sounds inane, and in any case the institutional fallout is so severe that the window of opportunity for crypto to demonstrate real utility in the developed world before it gets regulated to death just got a lot narrower.<\/p>\n\n\n\n The developers, too, will slowly leave. Who wants to believe that they’re working for an industry that will never be net good for the world? “Why should I keep developing a protocol that nobody will use?” “This space is totally rotten. I feel like I’m shellshocked and can’t keep working anymore.” These are real statements that real builders have told me in the last two days. Sure, there may not be any sudden exodus where thousands of developers quit their jobs overnight, but gradually, one by one, most of them will eventually reach a point in their rationalizations where they can no longer justify continuing onward.<\/p>\n\n\n\n And there we have it\u30fcno dramatic explosion into smithereens, but instead the most depressing, irreversible grind toward zero conceivable, with no hope for recourse.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Counterpoint: “Crypto always comes back”<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n Saying “crypto always comes back” is like saying “the turkey always wakes up the next morning.”<\/p>\n\n\n\n Frankly, I think that when people tell you to “zoom out bro, have some conviction,” they are either:<\/p>\n\n\n\n If you cannot articulate a reason more definite than “have some conviction, bro,” you are admitting that you did not arrive at your conclusion via any process of actual logical reasoning, but are instead simply naively extrapolating from base rates and ignoring the incredible and massive differences between this collapse and the previous ones.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Sure, people who have said “it’s different this time”! have typically been wrong. But were you right about those times either? In 2018, did you predict that crypto would ascend into stratospheric heights fueled by an “everything bubble” as a result of low interest rates caused by a literal global pandemic?<\/em> I suspect not.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Look, if someone comes up to you and tells you, “this time it truly is different,” and they give you a long list of good reasons why this time actually is different,<\/em> and your response is to simply insist that it’s not, you have not actually engaged them in argument. Your position is one of pure faith, because if it wasn’t, there would be reasons<\/em> that you could articulate beyond making broad, mystical assertions about the immutable value of crypto.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Counterpoint: “Builders will keep building”<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n For whom will the builders build? The ten people left trading back and forth on any given chain after the dust settles? What, exactly, will they build\u30fcthe 51st decentralized perps protocol on Aptos?<\/p>\n\n\n I don’t mean to be too critical\u30fcafter all, in the end I am myself a builder, so to speak. And it is indeed my intention to keep on building, insofar as there remains something to build on top of. So to some extent, yes, builders will keep on building!<\/p>\n\n\n\n But, my dear reader, surely you see what point I am getting at here? Saying that “builders will keep on building” is akin to saying “Ethereum will keep on producing blocks.” Sure, I have no doubt that there will be some<\/em> builders who keep on building something<\/em> on the blockchain. However, fundamentally, this only results in something good if they are building products that are used by and deliver value to actual people!<\/p>\n\n\n\n It does us little good if Ethereum keeps on producing blocks but the only thing occupying block space is CEX\/DEX arbitrage, the occasional News Event Inu meme coin, and the increasingly infrequent movement of funds of the dwindling handful of people who haven’t just deposited into Coinbase or stuck everything in a hardware wallet, committing to not touching crypto again for the next several years.<\/p>\n\n\n\n There is a valuable core of an idea here, which is that the next generation of builders will invent the primitives which spark a new wave of crypto adoption, much like Vitalik and Hayden Adams did with Uniswap and the xy = k<\/em> invariant AMM. I do not deny that this is theoretically conceivable. However, simply noting the theoretical possibility<\/em> of this outcome does not mean that it is certain or even likely. It also ultimately does us little good to have beautiful protocols on chain that are effectively unusable because harsh securities regulations and KYC\/AML requirements have crushed the ability of normal people to easily onramp or offramp funds!<\/p>\n\n\n\n Speaking of regulation, the fundamental ability to build<\/em> also depends, in part, on the encroachment of the regulatory state and the willingness of institutions to engage with crypto. Yes, if you’re building a completely anonymous, fully decentralized, immutable protocol, then you don’t necessarily need either of these. However, if you want to have effects on the “world of atoms,” so to speak, you depend on the good graces of the government and big business. How do you propose to tokenize the S&P 500 or bring Treasuries on-chain without the blessing of the SEC? How do you propose to integrate crypto into restaurant reservations or event ticketing without uptake by large organizations which will help spearhead changes and legitimize the technology? To be frank\u30fcit seems like our chances of any<\/em> sort of institutional friendliness toward crypto evaporated overnight alongside FTX users’ deposits.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Counterpoint: “This proves why decentralized finance is necessary”<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n I don’t mean to be rude, but this is just obviously a cope. In some sense<\/em> it is true, of course\u30fcif you can simply inspect a protocol’s solvency onchain then bank runs need not happen. But why don’t we take this one step further and ask, why isn’t DeFi more popular right now?<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n If you shifted humanity’s IQ distribution up by two entire standard deviations and rebuilt the entire EVM interaction UX from scratch, then sure, perhaps in this utopian world of pure fantasy, people would be able to make great use of decentralized finance! But in the actual world of sad reality that we live in, if you exclude stablecoin payments in the undeveloped world, the only people who seem to actually be capable of making use of DeFi are highly educated engineers in the top 5% of the population, and even then<\/em> a good number of them end up getting rugged by bridge hacks or “highly profitable trading strategies.”<\/p>\n\n\n\n I would also add that one might say with equal validity that the insolvency of FTX “proves why strict regulation is necessary” to protect American consumers from Ponzi schemes. Here’s a list of bank runs in the last 12 years from Wikipedia:<\/p>\n\n\n\n Wow! Looks like American regulations are actually doing a pretty good job of protecting us from bank runs! Maybe we should expand the American regulatory state to the rest of the world?<\/p>\n\n\n\n\n
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