The greatest crypto investments historically in each cycle have been made by betting early on new base layer infrastructure primitives (PoW, Smart contracts, PoS, high throughput, modular etc.). If we look at the top 25 assets on Coingecko, only two tokens are not L1 blockchain native tokens (excluding pegged assets) - Uniswap and Shiba Inu. The first rationalization of this phenomenon was by Joel Monegro in 2016 who proposed the “fat protocol thesis”, which argues the biggest difference in value accrual between web3 and web2 is that crypto base layers accrue more value than the collective value captured by applications built on top of them, whereby the value is derived from:
The original Fat Protocol Thesis
Fast forward to 2024 - the original thesis has gone through numerous industry debates, alongside several structural changes in industry dynamics that have risen to challenge the original claims of the fat protocol thesis:
I argue here that crypto applications are the main beneficiary of the shift in the way we are building infrastructure. Specifically, an intent centric transaction supply chain with orderflow exclusivity and intangibles such as UX and brand will increasingly become moats for killer apps and allow them to monetize much more effectively than the current state.
Ethereum’s MEV landscape has changed significantly since the merge and the introduction of Flashbots and MEV-Boost. A once dark forest dominated by searchers has now evolved to a somewhat commoditized orderflow marketplace, where the current MEV supply chain is heavily dominated by validators, who are receiving ~90% of MEV generated in the form of bids up each player in the supply chain.
Ethereum’s MEV supply chain
Validators capturing a majority of extractable value from orderflow leaves most players in the transaction supply chain unsatisfied - users want to be compensated for generating orderflow, dapps want to retain value from their users’ orderflow, searchers and builders want greater margins. As such, value hungry participants have adapted by experiementing with numerous strategies to extract alpha, one of which is a searcher-builder integration - the idea being having higher certainty of inclusion for searcher bundles will result in higher margins. There’s extensive data and literature that shows the exclusivity is the key to value capture in a competitive market, and applications with the most valuable flow will hold pricing power
This has also been seen in retail equity trading via brokers like Robinhood - which sustains “0 fee” trading by selling orderflow to market makers, and monetize in the form of capturing rebates. MMs like Citadel are willing to pay for this flow due to their ability to profit via arbitrage and information asymmetry.
This is further evident in an increasing number of transactions going through private mempools, which recently hit an all time high on Ethereum of 30%. Dapps realize that value of all user orderflow is being extracted and leaked up the MEV supply chain - and that private transactions allow for more customizability and monetization around sticky user flow.
https://x.com/mcutler/status/1808281859463565361
This is a trend I expect to continue as we move towards a chain abstracted future. With an intent-centric execution model, the transaction supply chain likely becomes more fragmented, with applications gating their orderflow to networks of solvers that can offer the most competitive execution, which drives solver competition to squeeze margins lower. However, I expect the majority of value capture to be shifted from the base layer (Validators) to the user facing layer, with middleware components being valuable but operating on low margins - i.e. frontends and apps that can generate valuable orderflow will hold pricing power over searchers/solvers.
How value (might) accrue in the future
We are already seeing this play out today with niche forms of orderflow utilizing application specific sequencing such as oracle extractable value (OEV) auctions (e.g. Pyth, API3, UMA Oval), serving as a means for lending protocols to recapture liquidation bids that would have gone to validators otherwise.
If we further breakdown the 30% of private transactions mentioned above - a majority come from front-ends like TG Bots, Dexes, and wallets:
Breakdown of transaction origination source from those that go through private mempools
For how much crypto-natives have been touted for having low attention spans, some level of retention is finally being seen. Apps illustrate that both brand and UX can serve as a meaningful moat -
This demonstrates that lindy effects in applications exist just as much, if not more than in infrastructure. Typically, new technology adoption (crypto included) follows some sort of S-curve, and as we move past early adopters into more of the majority - the next wave of users will be less sophisticated and therefore less price sensitive, enabling brands that are able to reach critical mass the ability to monetize in creative (or simple) ways.
Crypto’s S-Curve
As someone who primarily focuses on researching and investing in infrastructure, this post is not by any means aimed to dismiss infrastructure as an investable asset class within crypto - rather a shift in mindset when thinking about net new categories of infrastructure that enable the next generation of applications serving users higher up the S-curve. New infrastructure primitives need to illustrate net-new use cases on the application level to make them compelling. At the same time, there’s sufficient proof of sustainable business models on an application level, where user ownership directly leads to value accrual. We unfortunately have likely passed the phase of the market where punting on every new shiny L1 will bring exponential returns; though those with meaningful differentiation may still deservingly capture mindshare and value.
Instead, a non-exhaustive list of “infrastrcuture” that I’ve been spending more time thinking about and understanding include:
I guess it should go without saying that if you’re building anything that resonates with the above, please reach out as I’d love to chat. I’m also all ears for feedback or counterarguments, as frankly investing would be much easier if I’m entirely wrong about this.
This article is reprinted from [X], Forward the Original Title‘Make Applications Great Again’, All copyrights belong to the original author [@0xAdrianzy]. If there are objections to this reprint, please contact the Gate Learn team, and they will handle it promptly.
Liability Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not constitute any investment advice.
Translations of the article into other languages are done by the Gate Learn team. Unless mentioned, copying, distributing, or plagiarizing the translated articles is prohibited.
The greatest crypto investments historically in each cycle have been made by betting early on new base layer infrastructure primitives (PoW, Smart contracts, PoS, high throughput, modular etc.). If we look at the top 25 assets on Coingecko, only two tokens are not L1 blockchain native tokens (excluding pegged assets) - Uniswap and Shiba Inu. The first rationalization of this phenomenon was by Joel Monegro in 2016 who proposed the “fat protocol thesis”, which argues the biggest difference in value accrual between web3 and web2 is that crypto base layers accrue more value than the collective value captured by applications built on top of them, whereby the value is derived from:
The original Fat Protocol Thesis
Fast forward to 2024 - the original thesis has gone through numerous industry debates, alongside several structural changes in industry dynamics that have risen to challenge the original claims of the fat protocol thesis:
I argue here that crypto applications are the main beneficiary of the shift in the way we are building infrastructure. Specifically, an intent centric transaction supply chain with orderflow exclusivity and intangibles such as UX and brand will increasingly become moats for killer apps and allow them to monetize much more effectively than the current state.
Ethereum’s MEV landscape has changed significantly since the merge and the introduction of Flashbots and MEV-Boost. A once dark forest dominated by searchers has now evolved to a somewhat commoditized orderflow marketplace, where the current MEV supply chain is heavily dominated by validators, who are receiving ~90% of MEV generated in the form of bids up each player in the supply chain.
Ethereum’s MEV supply chain
Validators capturing a majority of extractable value from orderflow leaves most players in the transaction supply chain unsatisfied - users want to be compensated for generating orderflow, dapps want to retain value from their users’ orderflow, searchers and builders want greater margins. As such, value hungry participants have adapted by experiementing with numerous strategies to extract alpha, one of which is a searcher-builder integration - the idea being having higher certainty of inclusion for searcher bundles will result in higher margins. There’s extensive data and literature that shows the exclusivity is the key to value capture in a competitive market, and applications with the most valuable flow will hold pricing power
This has also been seen in retail equity trading via brokers like Robinhood - which sustains “0 fee” trading by selling orderflow to market makers, and monetize in the form of capturing rebates. MMs like Citadel are willing to pay for this flow due to their ability to profit via arbitrage and information asymmetry.
This is further evident in an increasing number of transactions going through private mempools, which recently hit an all time high on Ethereum of 30%. Dapps realize that value of all user orderflow is being extracted and leaked up the MEV supply chain - and that private transactions allow for more customizability and monetization around sticky user flow.
https://x.com/mcutler/status/1808281859463565361
This is a trend I expect to continue as we move towards a chain abstracted future. With an intent-centric execution model, the transaction supply chain likely becomes more fragmented, with applications gating their orderflow to networks of solvers that can offer the most competitive execution, which drives solver competition to squeeze margins lower. However, I expect the majority of value capture to be shifted from the base layer (Validators) to the user facing layer, with middleware components being valuable but operating on low margins - i.e. frontends and apps that can generate valuable orderflow will hold pricing power over searchers/solvers.
How value (might) accrue in the future
We are already seeing this play out today with niche forms of orderflow utilizing application specific sequencing such as oracle extractable value (OEV) auctions (e.g. Pyth, API3, UMA Oval), serving as a means for lending protocols to recapture liquidation bids that would have gone to validators otherwise.
If we further breakdown the 30% of private transactions mentioned above - a majority come from front-ends like TG Bots, Dexes, and wallets:
Breakdown of transaction origination source from those that go through private mempools
For how much crypto-natives have been touted for having low attention spans, some level of retention is finally being seen. Apps illustrate that both brand and UX can serve as a meaningful moat -
This demonstrates that lindy effects in applications exist just as much, if not more than in infrastructure. Typically, new technology adoption (crypto included) follows some sort of S-curve, and as we move past early adopters into more of the majority - the next wave of users will be less sophisticated and therefore less price sensitive, enabling brands that are able to reach critical mass the ability to monetize in creative (or simple) ways.
Crypto’s S-Curve
As someone who primarily focuses on researching and investing in infrastructure, this post is not by any means aimed to dismiss infrastructure as an investable asset class within crypto - rather a shift in mindset when thinking about net new categories of infrastructure that enable the next generation of applications serving users higher up the S-curve. New infrastructure primitives need to illustrate net-new use cases on the application level to make them compelling. At the same time, there’s sufficient proof of sustainable business models on an application level, where user ownership directly leads to value accrual. We unfortunately have likely passed the phase of the market where punting on every new shiny L1 will bring exponential returns; though those with meaningful differentiation may still deservingly capture mindshare and value.
Instead, a non-exhaustive list of “infrastrcuture” that I’ve been spending more time thinking about and understanding include:
I guess it should go without saying that if you’re building anything that resonates with the above, please reach out as I’d love to chat. I’m also all ears for feedback or counterarguments, as frankly investing would be much easier if I’m entirely wrong about this.
This article is reprinted from [X], Forward the Original Title‘Make Applications Great Again’, All copyrights belong to the original author [@0xAdrianzy]. If there are objections to this reprint, please contact the Gate Learn team, and they will handle it promptly.
Liability Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not constitute any investment advice.
Translations of the article into other languages are done by the Gate Learn team. Unless mentioned, copying, distributing, or plagiarizing the translated articles is prohibited.