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 trying to do real capital allocation, like MakerDAO buying government bonds, setting up sub-DAOs, appointing specialized teams, are gradually reshaping corporate governance models. The more a protocol seeks to achieve compound growth, the more it must resemble a corporation.
Tokenized stocks and digital asset bond tools cannot solve this problem either. They merely create a second claim on the same cash flow, competing with the underlying tokens. These tools cannot make protocols better at compound growth; they just redistribute returns from token holders who do not hold that tool to those who do.
Token burning is not stock buybacks. Ethereum’s burn mechanism is like a thermostat fixed at a certain temperature — unchanging; Apple’s stock buybacks are flexible decisions made by management based on market conditions. Smart capital allocation, adjusting strategies according to market situations, is the core of compound growth. Rigid rules cannot generate compounding; flexible decisions can.
And regulation? That’s actually the most worth exploring part. Today, tokens cannot compound because protocols cannot operate as companies: they cannot register as corporations, retain earnings, or make legally binding commitments to token holders. The GENIUS Act shows that the U.S. Congress can incorporate tokens into the financial system without stifling their development. When we have a framework allowing protocols to use corporate capital allocation tools, it will be the biggest catalyst in crypto history — far beyond Bitcoin spot ETFs.
Until then, smart capital will continue flowing into stocks, and the gap in compound growth between tokens and stocks will only widen each year.
This is not a bearish view on blockchain
Let me be clear: blockchain is an economic system with limitless potential. It will become the foundational infrastructure for digital payments and intelligent business. My company, Inversion, is developing a blockchain precisely because we believe in this.
The issue is not the technology itself but the economic model of tokens. Today’s blockchain networks merely transfer value, not accumulate and reinvest to achieve compound growth. But this will change: regulation will improve, governance will mature, some protocol will find a way to retain and reinvest value like a successful enterprise. When that day comes, tokens will essentially become stocks in all but name, and the engine of compounding will be officially activated.
I am not bearish on that future — I just have my own judgment on when it will arrive.
One day, blockchain networks will achieve value’s compound growth, and until then, I will choose to buy companies that leverage crypto technology to accelerate their own compound growth.
I may be wrong about timing — crypto is an adaptive system, and that’s one of its most valuable traits. But I don’t need perfect accuracy; I only need to see the big picture: long-term performance of compound-growth assets will ultimately surpass that of other assets.
And that is the true power of compounding. As Munger said: “The astonishing thing is that people like us, who simply try to avoid stupidity, gain such a huge long-term advantage over others who pursue brilliance.”
Crypto technology drastically reduces infrastructure costs, and wealth will ultimately flow to those who utilize these low-cost infrastructures to achieve compound growth.