There’s a popular misconception that the Merge helps Ethereum run faster, or reduces gas fees. Not exactly.
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That job is largely left to Layer 2 chains like Arbitrum, Optimism and Starknet that run on top of Ethereum.
The real significance of the Merge lies in the shift in consensus mechanisms.
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The switch from Proof-of-Work (PoW) to Proof-of-Stake (PoS) mechanisms will dramatically decrease the carbon footprint of running the blockchain by ~99.5%.
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MERGE | EVENTS
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This historic moment is lined up with a week full of live and virtual events.
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Here’s a list of digital events that you can attend from anywhere:
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The Eve of the Merge Livestream – Bankless
Wednesday, September 14th @ 5pm EST
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Ethereum Merge Viewing Party – Ethereum Foundation
Wednesday, September 14th @ 11pm EST
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Post-Merge Vibe Sesh with the Ethereum Community – Bankless
Thursday, September 15th @ 9am EST
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Weekly Rollup Merge Recap Livestream – Bankless
Thursday, September 15th @ 12pm EST
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For those at EthBerlin this week, there are some IRL events that you can also attend!
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Here are a couple that we know of:
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The Merge Party – Radicle, Entropy & Friends (RSVP pw: hacktheplanet)
Fundraising has quickly become one of the most popular topics in the crypto community. In a falling market, the activity of smart money is only increasing. Funds tend to be the first to find promising projects and establish trends. As such, CryptoRank has compiled comprehensive research on recent crypto fundraising activity.
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Key Highlights:
The market downturn has had an impact on crypto fundraising, but the overall outlook remains positive;
The number of M&A and debt financing transactions has increased; non-crypto companies are tending to invest in Web3 startups;
Large investors are launching additional funds;
Web3 has become the most popular category among investors.
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The State of Fundraising
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The past months have been tough for the crypto market. With all of the troubled projects, frequent exploits, bankruptcies, and negative news in the background (especially in non-crypto media), the crypto market cap is sitting around the $1 trillion mark, while less than a year ago it has almost touched $3 trillion.
The macro picture is looking bad too. Inflation is rising all across the world (except in a few countries), and governments have had to raise rates. Rate hikes have negative effects first and foremost on young companies, which is, essentially, any crypto project.
Indeed, fundraising has followed the trend, and the past months have not been as good as April 2022, when the raised amount and the number of deals reached an all-time high. However, fundraising has not performed as badly as the crypto market as a whole. It is worth noting that fundraising is an early stage investment, and it is difficult to judge the success of an investment after only a few months (sometimes even years). In addition, it is worth noting that many crypto investment funds are multi-profile companies that also might conduct trading activities, which may lead to a poor performance. A great example is Three Arrows Capital, which had an outstanding portfolio of early-stage projects, but went bankrupt due to trading losses and uncovered debt.
What we are seeing today is an evolution from going in blind into investments to a more thorough assessment and risk management of long-term strategies. While raised amounts and number of deals are comparatively lower than what has previously been achieved, this transition to more cautious investments will help the market to grow during the next bull-runs by filling it with high-quality projects with enough money and support from experienced leaders to sustain growth. Investors have realized that Web3 and crypto projects can exist in the non-crypto world and become real money-making businesses.
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As we can see, the number of deals has fallen slightly, with the raised amounts falling significantly, especially in July. This means that funds are not necessarily less active, but they are tending to pick only the best of the best, and choosing to invest more modest amounts. Speaking of August, the picture over the first half of the month does not look promising. Still, we’ve seen a few notable deals including between tier 1 investment funds and promising projects. Additionally, it is worth noting that more and more non-crypto companies are investing in crypto startups despite the market downturn.
As mentioned above, Web3 as a category is dominating among crypto projects that raised funds in 2022. The number of Web3 projects shows that it is one of the most sought-after startup categories . Investors are seeking such projects since Web3 is on the verge of mass adoption.
Blockchain infrastructure and centralized finance, on the other hand, have raised the highest amounts of $8.79 billion and $8.44 billion respectively. Many prospective blockchains are raising significant amounts, but more on that later. While a core part of crypto is its “decentralization”, it also relies heavily on centralized organizations. First of all, these are exchanges and trading platforms, which help to explore new markets and bring new users to crypto. In essence, centralized finance is crucial to mass adoption by institutions.
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A total of $30 billion has been raised from 1412 deals so far in 2022 . The number of deals and totals may be higher due to undisclosed amounts of investment from private investors. Yet still, it perfectly describes the current state. In one of our recent posts (https://t.me/CryptoRankNews/7239) we provided a breakdown of monthly fundraising volumes by categories over the year. The data shows that NFT was raising higher amounts during the period from the end of 2021 — beginning of 2022, while Web3’s raises significantly accelerated in this year’s second quarter.
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Crypto VCs are the New Gurus of the Bear Market
Crypto investment funds are the trendsetters. At a time when it is difficult to find good investment opportunities on the public market, large funds are regularly discovering new projects at early stages. Investment managers have become new gurus for the selection of promising cryptocurrency projects, creating new trends in the industry. Tracking their portfolios might be extremely useful for those who want to find early-stage prospective projects and potential airdrop or whitelist opportunities.
Despite the fact that the main goal of cooperation between a project and the VC remains funding, priorities are changing. As mentioned above, the behavior of funds has changed from extensive portfolio expansion to the selection of better projects to support development. This guidance is also important for projects that intend to develop a complete product, as such,interaction between funds and projects has expanded to help in organizing processes, finding employees, and other areas of growth.
Now, in addition to traditionally governed investment funds, decentralized autonomous organizations has become a new trend for running investment funds. Some of them are showing as good as performance as tier 1–2 VC funds, however, they often come across some pitfalls.
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Gaming Guilds stand out as a DAO category, they primarily invest in GameFi projects. Some of them are struggling due to market downturn. The is exasperated by that fact that in-game assets (NFTs, utility tokens) may lose their value much faster than the broader market due to changes in in-game mechanics or play to earn rewards. For example, the token of one of the most popular blockchain games, Axie Infinity, has lost over 90% of its value since its ATH in November 2021. The same goes for their NFTs, which are required to play the game and earn rewards. However, the GameFi industry is quickly developing, and many guilds have already made confident bets on upcoming projects, which may even overtake established leaders as Axie Infinity.
Recently, several major VCs have announced the launch of new high-volume funds. Of note, Sequoia Capital has launched three region-specific funds (China, India, and Southeast Asia) totalling $11.85 billion.
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On CryptoRank.io you can track performance of over 250 major crypto investment funds, including their publicly traded assets and upcoming projects.
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Notable Venture Deals
There were plenty of venture deals in 2022 that are worth attention and analysis. We are half way through 2022 and it has already became the most important year for crypto fundraising, despite the market downturn. Arguably the most important fundraising event over the past 30 days was the Series A investment round of Aptos, led by FTX Ventures and Jump Crypto.
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Overall, projects are raising lower amounts and valuations are tending to be lower. Nevertheless, many companies are still coming out with new record valuations. Note that the valuations do not appear by coincidence. They reflect future cash flows, and for such significant values, it must be really impressive profits or growth rates. This once again underlines that the crypto industry can make a profit no worse than traditional finance.
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It is worth mentioning Animoca Brands, which recently raised $75 million with a $5.9 billion valuation. Animoca has an outstanding portfolio and is one of the most active investors today. This is a great example of how a company investing mainly in Web3 projects can compete with traditional financial investors.
The poor state of the market has led to an increase in merger and acquisition deals and debt financing. Companies on the verge of bankruptcy (most of which are DeFi projects), for some investors, are an attractive prospect. For example, Sam Bankman-Fried (FTX, Alameda Research), Changpeng Zhao (Binance) and Justin Sun (TRON) have expressed their readiness to save some projects from extinction. However, such investments are a very long game, besides, not many projects have a real chance of survival.
Among the recent M&A deals, it is worth highlighting following:
The mixing of cryptocurrency projects and other companies is continuing to grow and gain momentum. Large projects, such as Uniswap, are doing well by expanding their activities into new areas. NFT is probably the closest to fully-fledged mass adoption, many non-crypto companies are beginning to understand the sector and are ready to develop in this direction.
This fundraising data, in a way, describes the current state of the crypto market, even without mentioning global market cap and price of Bitcoin. Obviously, the activity has slightly decreased over the past few months, and raised amounts are not as high as previously seen. However, investors are finding new promising projects and investing funds into already proven quality ones and thereby stimulating their growth. In a similar way, the market is also being “cleaned up”: weak projects are losing users, followed by their cryptocurrency rate falling.
We are witnessing the accelerating integration of cryptocurrencies into traditional financial institutions, as well as the arrival of a huge number of new users in Web3. It is quite possible that very soon Web3 will become a part of our daily life, as Web 2.0 once became. After all, it is no wonder that many of the large companies of the previous generation are the same investors who are now actively investing in Web3 projects.
Blockchain makes the changes currently taking place available for many users to participate, not just to a select few and large foundations. The widespread amount of information available publicly are allowing crypto enthusiasts to follow the activities of large funds, and the projects themselves are prepared to listen to users and reward them for their input. This is also a distinctive feature of Web3.
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To keep up-to-date on fund performance you can visit the Funds page on CryptoRank: https://cryptorank.io/funds
A tiny fraction of cryptocurrencies from the last bull market reached all-time highs this cycle. So, what are they really worth? And why?
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Cash flows and revenues may be bearish for digital assets, as they place caps on their potential valuations in line with traditional companies with far slower growth trajectories
“The nature of crypto is that it cares about growth potential,” one portfolio manager said
Most cryptocurrencies die.
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It’s well known among those who’ve witnessed more than one cycle. Hundreds, if not thousands, of tokens surge, alongside bitcoin and ether, but rarely — or, often never — reclaim all-time highs.
Just 26 of the top 200 digital assets by market capitalization went on to set new highs after the peak of the last bull market in January 2018.
Half were layer-1 tokens, such as litecoin, ether and cardano. Five were governance tokens conferring voting rights powering decentralized finance protocols, such as Gnosis and district0x.
It’s not a rosy picture. But the outlook deteriorates further in denominating how much a cryptocurrency is worth in bitcoin terms, instead of the customary dollar.
Switch to bitcoin pricing, and only six of those cryptocurrencies exceeded their previous peak over the same time period: dogecoin, binance coin, chainlink, decentraland, vechain and enjin coin.
A small selection of winners, representing just 3% of the top 200 digital assets. There’s no clear trend linking them, either.
Dogecoin is literally a “to-the-moon” self-parody, while layer-1 token vechain is powered by the “blockchain for supply chains” meme.
Binance coin boasts some staying power buoyed by enticing burn mechanisms. Chainlink has, arguably, more utility than most, supporting a stretching ecosystem of data feeds and price oracles, which connect various blockchains and smart contracts to execute transactions without third-party validators.
Decentraland and enjin coin’s success, industry participants say, can be explained in part by the metaverse brouhaha and blockchain-powered gaming dapps (decentralized applications) expected to soon grow in popularity.
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Such spurious connections suggest most digital assets inevitably crescendo in a bull market, but quickly go kaput once the hype fades — destined to never revisit their glittery glories to render top-buying bagholders whole.
So, how does one equitably price digital assets? What is crypto worth, really?
Considering the top 200 coins from the previous bull market are down more than 90%, in dollar terms, from all-time highs, how and why do markets decide how low they go?
Cash flows are bearish for digital assets
Token Terminal is one platform pitching ways to figure it all out. It offers a range of metrics that aim to compare various protocols, echoing traditional company valuation methods in price-to-earning ratios and total revenues.
“Looking backwards, especially comparing the 2018 bull market to what we witnessed in 2021, it’s very difficult to really build any sort of thesis for why certain tokens succeed,” Oskari Tempakka, Token Terminal’s growth lead, told Blockworks.
The platform gauges protocols that generate cash flow alongside blockchain startups that operate entirely on-chain. It wasn’t possible to value protocols based on those factors during the last bull market, Tempakka said, as it was only halfway through 2020 — during DeFi summer — when the first applications built on Ethereum actually started generating positive cash flows to the protocol.
The conclusion: Analyzing the highest-flying cryptocurrencies from the last bull, whether dollar valuation or bitcoin, on a fundamental basis is essentially impossible.
Still, half of the top 200 digital assets which recorded fresh all-time highs throughout the most recent cycle were layer-1 assets.
Layer-1s, the backbone of digital assets, outperformed this time around on the back of healthy name recognition and the efforts of legions of developers, as well as market makers and deep-pocketed traders favoring assets with more liquidity.
There has to be a sizable market capitalization for a $1 billion-plus hedge fund to bother trading an asset — or else move the price needle so much in building a long or short leg that profits become obsolete.
“I’d say the thesis behind layer-1s is that you’re essentially building an infinitely scalable settlement layer for any other applications being built on top,” Tempakka said. “It’s easier to build a more bullish thesis without a valuation cap than it is for a pure application — that’s how we’re looking at layer-1s right now, at least the ones that actually are able to generate cash flow and capture that value.”
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Cash flows are actually bearish as they relate to trying to put a price tag on cryptoassets. They’re not bearish in and of themselves as a metric, but industry participants argue that crypto’s rapid growth trajectory demands a different framework.
Applying convention fundamental stock-picking techniques would never work with venture capital-backed startups, they say — so why should it work when it comes to digital assets?
If it’s possible to value a cryptoasset based on conventional fundamentals, then a relatively apples-to-apples comparison to a real-world company ought to be possible, too.
“Crypto doesn’t care about fundamentals, traditional sense of cash flows,” Hassan Bassiri, vice president of portfolio management at digital asset manager Arca, told Blockworks. “The nature of crypto is that it cares about growth potential.”
Added Bassiri: “Say something like Aave or Yearn is trading at a 1,000 price-to-sales ratio but its fintech competitor neobank is trading at 200 — is the cryptocurrency worth a 5x multiple on that?”
Tapping cash flows to value digital assets — just like an Amazon or a Tesla stock — implies they can’t go up forever, a notion akin to kryptonite for crypto die-hards.
Indeed, cash flows provide one method of valuing digital assets, which automatically means they can’t go up forever, a notion akin to kryptonite for cryptocurrency investors.
The result: a volatile, topsy-turvy market that prioritizes social sentiment and glamor over Econ 101.
Markets driven by fundamentals are on the horizon
If looking to the past doesn’t illuminate how traders appraise digital assets, who’s to say which projects out of a sea of many hopefuls have a realistic shot at outlasting the bear market?
One cause for optimism, according to Bassiri: More and more protocols are working to tie real-world use cases to on-chain yield. Case in point: MakerDAO’s recent move to float a $100 million loan denominated in the token DAI to 151-year old Huntingdon Valley Bank, with the potential to increase the credit revolver to a staggering $1 billion over 12 months.
Token Terminal’s Tempakka is vying for the prospects of a future in which the majority of top tokens are driven by measurable fundamentals — and they must generate sustainable cash flows to power that model.
“If you’re a traditional private equity investor, you’re getting to a stage where you can look at the revenue data of crypto protocol and actually build a strong investment thesis around it,” Tempakka said.
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In other words, it’s slowly — then, perhaps, all at once — becoming possible to rationalize crypto plays on something more tangible than hype or belief.
Many an institutional digital assets-focused trader would argue that world is already here. Crypto hedge fund firms build complicated quant models around social sentiment and ebbs and flows in trading volumes.
But those players are often the first to admit those convictions that construct strategies change rapidly in cryptoland. Fundamental metrics are, finally, becoming a powerful standby for sophisticated investors — consider the rise of discretionary strategies — but, for now, they’re just one piece of the overall puzzle.
The remainder is filled in by deep research probing the ins-and-outs of developer teams and their abilities, or lack thereof, to meet the lofty, winding road that lies before them.