Episodi

  • Preamble rant:

    The recent collapse of FTX, a large crypto exchange, and its associated entities, left many of us disappointed and disgusted with flashbacks to Enron and Lehman Brothers. Nothing is new under the sun. Unfortunately, whenever humans are involved, there is a potential for bad actors to make poor choices that wreak havoc. This has proven true across industries, countries, and time. But regulation and controls can help safeguard the little guy. I expect more regulation, legislation, and guidelines in the months and years to come.

    Still, I worry that the wrong lessons are being learned. Some folks might see the FTX implosion as vindication that ā€œcrypto is badā€. Others might see it as the death knell for crypto and blockchain technology at large. This is a mistake. Technology is neither good nor bad. Humans use technology for good or bad. Thatā€™s an important distinction. One of my takeaways is to double-down and continue uncovering ways in which crypto and blockchain technologies can solve real-world problems. Letā€™s go!

    Giant maps and summer road trips

    When I was a kid, my family would go on road trips every summer. It was a great adventure. From time to time, we would pull over to the side of the road while our parents struggled and fumbled through giant fold-out maps. This was Nigeria in the 1990s. There was no internet. The maps were sometimes outdated. As you can imagine, we got lost a couple times. One day, we narrowly escaped being detained by the military because we inadvertently were driving towards Aso Rock, which was then the presidential palace of Abacha, one of Nigeriaā€™s brutal dictators! Yikes!!

    Today, I canā€™t remember the last time I opened up a giant fold-out map. Thank God for Google Maps! I now use it every day to find the optimal route for my commute. Itā€™s been a massive time-saver as Iā€™ve learned to deal with the joys of New Jerseyā€™s clogged up highways. If you are like me, you might not have realized that some companies such as Uber pay Google to embed Maps in their products. Some other companies use Google Maps to optimize the distribution of their products. Itā€™s really important for these companies that Google Maps is accurate and frequently updated.

    As much as I love Google Maps, itā€™s not perfect.

    Google Mapā€™s gaps

    I am going to highlight two gaps with existing mapping services: (1) Updates and (2) Ownership.

    1. Updates

    Google has done a great job mapping out the world. However, new roads and buildings are constructed every day, new businesses emerge with new signage. Logically, Google Maps prioritizes map updates for high population cities. Thus, Google updates Street View and Satellite pictures of big cities like London at least every year while smaller cities like my ancestral hometown, Ijebu-Ode, might be updated every couple of years. Is there a better solution?

    2. Ownership

    In 2013, Google acquired Waze for $1B. Waze was a fast-growing Google Maps competitor that utilized an army of volunteers to submit real-time traffic updates and review maps. Over 420,000 people volunteered to edit Wazeā€™s maps. Additionally, Waze had ~100 employees at the time of acquisition. But get this: the average Waze employee received $1.2M after the acquisition but the volunteers received nothing. Ouch. Is there a better solution?

    Introducing Hivemapper

    Hivemapper is a decentralized map built by people using dashcams. It solves both of the problems - updates and ownership - outlined above by providing crypto-incentives and technology to anyone interested in participating.

    Did you know that each photo in Google Mapsā€™ Street View was taken by a Google employee in a specialized car with a 3D camera? One can imagine that the cost would be astronomical. Wouldnā€™t it be better if we could crowdsource images from drivers on their daily commute or road trips? Imagine if just 1% of all drivers did this. They would continually map every new highway off ramp, new small business, freshly created pothole, etc. But thatā€™s not all. In the future, these drivers could also collect other types of data such as air quality, weather, noise, wireless coverage, and so on. These contributors would be rewarded with HONEY, the native token of Hivemapper. The best part is that it does not require any change in behavior, contributors need only install a dashcam the size of a deck of cards.

    The Hivemapper Network recently launched on November 3, 2022. There are two dashcam models available priced from $549 (larger design) to $649 (smaller, more compact design shown above). If you order before January 7, 2023, you will be airdropped 500 Honey tokens. Then you will earn more tokens as you drive once the dashcam is activated.

    Behind Hivemapper

    Hivemapper is led by executives at the confluence of tech, logistics and crypto. The team has individuals who built and scaled global maps and geospatial products at Yahoo Maps, Scale AI, and Mapbox. They are mathematicians, physicists, computer scientists, logistic experts, artists, and designers working together to create a decentralized mapping network.

    Hivemapper raised over $18M in its Series A from investors including Spark Capital, Multicoin Capital, Solana Ventures, and Founder Collective. Today, the company has a number of esteemed advisers including the current or former CEOs of Solana, Helium, Masterclass, Zillow, Tinder, and the former head of Apple Maps.

    Concerns

    While Hivemapper sounds interesting, it also set-off a number of alarm bells in my head. My concerns are centered around privacy, hacks and the HONEY token.

    A. Privacy

    Every website you visit and every click that you make on the internet is being monitored. Advertisers take that information to market new products and services to you. Now, imagine if your offline activities were being similarly tracked. Kinda scary, right? But I guess Google Maps is already tracking wherever I go.

    Hivemapper says it has privacy by design. The dashcams only collect the minimum required information. Furthermore, the company blurs licenses plates and peopleā€™s faces in the pictures and videos captured.

    B. Hacks

    Even if Hivemapper does what it says it would do to protect privacy, imagine if a bad actor hacked the dashcams and started collecting unauthorized information. It could be ugly. Hivemapper needs to have in place strong information security protocols to safeguard its contributors and collected data.

    C. HONEY token

    If a contributor successfully earned 1,000 HONEY tokens while driving across the country, what can they do with it? Worst case scenario, they might sell it. But what is supporting the underlying value of HONEY? For starters, there is a cap on the total amount of HONEY. Thus, if demand increases over time, the price of the HONEY tokens should rise. I also think Hivemapper could establish partnerships with major brands then enable HONEY holders to trade them in for Uber Eats credit or airline loyalty points.

    Some others have raised eyebrows about HONEYā€™s tokenomics. About 60% of the total HONEY supply has been pre-allocated to insiders with 20% going to employees, 15% to the company itself and 5% to the affiliated foundation. HONEYā€™s initial allocation of tokens to insiders is unusually high. For context, Ethereum only had 15% allocated to insiders while newer blockchains like Avalanche and Solana had 42% and 48% respectively.

    But one of the golden rules of tokenomics is to avoid projects with high concentration of token ownership amongst a few owners:

    Early successes

    Despite some of these misgivings, Hivemapper has achieved some early wins.

    During the alpha launch, the Hivemapper Network covered 95% of all roads in Manila, the capital of the Philippines in 6 months. It mapped 110,000 miles of road. Crucially, 75% of the map of Manila was refreshed every month. This is much higher than Google Maps.

    Additionally, the city of Shreveport, Louisiana has also become a Hivemapper customer. The city paid $7,000 for dashcams to be put in the cityā€™s fleet of garbage trucks. Shreveport hopes the frequently updated maps will provide greater visibility into residentsā€™ challenges ex potholes etc.

    Ideal customer

    I have considered getting a Hivemapper dashcam just to test it out and engage with the network. But I donā€™t think I drive enough to accumulate a significant amount of HONEY tokens. I think the ideal customers might be owners of large fleets of vehicles. For instance, cross-country trucking companies, school buses, taxi companies, and mail delivery services. These large fleets cover a lot of miles on an ongoing basis and could generate a lot of HONEY tokens. Nonetheless, it might still be worthwhile for a regular Joe who moonlights as an Uber driver to try it out.

    What do you think?

    I hope you have a wonderful week ahead. Stay grounded and seize the day.

    All the best,

    Afolabi



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit afolabio.substack.com
  • If you are like me, then you were a little awkward in college. Hereā€™s an example of an interaction I had on campus as I walked from my dorm to class.

    Pretty college co-ed: ā€œHey! Do you want a free t-shirt?ā€

    Me: Uh! (Awkwardly looks away. Runs in the opposite direction.)

    Donā€™t hurt mešŸ¤•

    Itā€™s complicated.

    Letā€™s flash back a few months before this awkward interaction.

    So many thoughts rushed through my head as I packed my bags. I wondered if my American professors would understand my Nigerian accent. I wondered if I would easily make friends, maybe meet a nice girl. But then my mother rocked me back to earth as she exclaimed ā€œPlease stay away from credit cards o!ā€. Apparently, someoneā€™s son was drowning in credit card debt. I guess he thought the money was free.

    In Nigeria, less than 3% of consumers have access to credit. Itā€™s a stark contrast to the US, where 83% of adults have credit cards (Federal Reserve). My mumā€™s friendā€™s son had recently relocated from Nigeria to the US for college. He was woefully unaware of how to manage credit. He would stop and chat with the pretty college co-eds waving free t-shirts in front of the gym. Eventually, he signed up for a couple of credit cards. Then it all went downhill. He didnā€™t stand a chance.

    And so I stayed away from credit cards.

    The case for credit šŸ’³

    But my views have evolved. I no longer see credit as a tool for self-destruction. Rather, I see credit as a tool - itā€™s neither good nor bad - itā€™s just a tool. If used properly, credit could help people build wealth and live healthier and happier lives. But if used improperly, it could lead to financial ruin. Credit is a double-edged sword.

    Living in Nigeria meant you paid cash for everything. The words ā€œmortgageā€, ā€œcar loanā€, ā€œstudent debtā€ and ā€œcredit card billsā€ were not in our vocabulary. No one had credit! And so you paid 100% cash when you bought a house or a car. The lack of credit also meant that no one had a credit score. So if you wanted to rent an apartment, you would have to pay 1-2 years of rent upfront. Needless to say, many of my cousins lived with their parents well into their late 20s and early 30s.

    Can you imagine if the US had the same setup as Nigeria? There would be untold pain. According to the National Association of Realtors, the average new home buyer in the US paid just 7% of the total purchase price as a downpayment and took out a loan for the rest. Similarly, according to Statista, 85% of new car purchases in the US are financed. Collectively, Americans owe more than $1.2 trillion in car loans. In Nigeria, the total is closer to $0.

    The ability to thoughtfully take on credit could save lives. Many hospitals in Nigeria require full payment before treatment is rendered. Too many people have needlessly died while family members frantically rushed to raise funds to pay for life-saving treatment. Itā€™s desperately heart-wrenching.

    The ability to take on mortgages could help many families own their homes and start building multi-generational wealth. Construction loans also enable investors to deliver more housing units to eager customers.

    Access to credit could enable a business owner to grow and sustain their business. Businesses might need loans to purchase raw materials to fulfill large orders. Businesses could even offer credit to customers, enabling them to buy more products. Credit could provide the runway a growing entrepreneur needs to take off.

    The list could go on. The bottom line is that access to credit could help grow the economy while enabling people and businesses to lead more prosperous lives. If this is true, then why do only 3% of Nigerians have access to credit?

    Problems dey šŸš§

    My sense is that credit penetration is low for a couple of key reasons:

    * Structural: Nigeria does not have a well-established credit score system. In other countries, credit scores are linked to a national identity number ex Social Security Number. In recent years, Nigeria introduced a National Identification Number. This is a key first step.

    * Enforcement: Nigeria experiences weak enforcement of justice, thatā€™s putting it nicely. This means that creditors are highly exposed if the debtor does not pay. Iā€™ve heard of judges being bribed, police turning a blind eye, and uneven treatment. Creditors may not reliably have recourse for bad loans.

    * Other business: Given the aforementioned risks, historically Nigerian banks considered other business opportunities to be more lucrative than lending. Providing credit to the masses was not high on their priority list. Fortunately, in recent years Nigerian banks have started offering secure credit cards backed up by deposits to their customers.

    * Policy: Government policy does not expressly encourage the extension of credit to the masses. Incentives, if any, do not appear to be working.

    Nonetheless, there are many exciting FinTechs working to crack this nut. I recently met a couple of them at a FinTech Happy Hour in NYC.

    Local solutions to local problems šŸ‘·

    QuickCheck is one of the exciting FinTechs extending credit to Nigerians through a mobile app. The start-up was founded in 2017. It uses artificial intelligence and machine learning to extend microloans to its customers. Quickcheckā€™s lending process is very fast (less than 10 min) and does not require any paper documents.

    Quickcheck has funded over 1.1 million micro-loans averaging $80 for 30-day terms. The total value of loans disbursed exceeds $40M. Most of the customers are middle class and 80% are between 25 and 43 years old. Returning customers account for over 70% of loans provided each month. The average interest charged is 40-50% per annum but bear in mind that most loans are only for 1 month-long term. Customers often use the loans to cover emergency expenses, school fees, or business expenses.

    QuickCheck works like a middle-man. They borrow large chunks of money at lower interest rates from high-net-worth individuals (HNWI) and institutions, then they turn around and lend out small chunks of money at higher interest rates to individuals and small-medium-sized businesses. They profit from the difference between interest rates, however, they also take the risk of issuing bad loans and the cost of operations.

    Figure 1: This is an illustration of QuickCheckā€™s business model

    QuickCheck needs to borrow more money so that it can grow its lending business and extend its impact. Unfortunately, it finds itself in an underserved in-between class of small- and middle-sized enterprises. Typically, businesses that need to raise less than $100k can access funds from local high-net-worth individuals (HNWI) or the capital markets. Larger businesses seeking to raise more than $5M can often access institutional creditors. But Quickcheckā€™s needs are in between these extremes.

    DeFi to the rescue? šŸ’»

    Decentralized Finance (DeFi) seeks to reduce costs and increase efficiency by using smart contracts and blockchain technology to eliminate middlemen like banks.

    For instance, today if you wanted to borrow $100k to buy a house, you might go to Bank of America. They will assess your creditworthiness and determine what interest rate to offer you. Mind you, Bank of America has thousands of employees and expensive offices all around the country. Thus, the interest rate they offer you need to be high enough for them to offset their costs and deliver a profit to their shareholders. Additionally, the United States has a recent history of bias in lending. Several banks, most notably Wells Fargo, have admitted that some under-represented minority groups were unfairly charged higher interest rates than others with similar qualifications. DeFi could help fix this.

    DeFi relies on smart contracts. This helps remove bias. Smart contracts are computer code. They simply operate based on data. If a person wanted to borrow $100k, the smart contract might check to determine if certain qualifications are met, if true then it disburses a loan. And because DeFi applications donā€™t have thousands of employees or expensive offices, they could offer more competitive interest rates than traditional lenders.

    Today, much of DeFi relies on over-collateralization to issue loans. Thus, if you wanted to borrow $100k cash you might be required to provide $150k of bitcoin which is held as collateral while you repay the loan. Overcollateralization works for crypto-rich, cash-poor people who believe that the value of digital assets would rise in the future. However, it does not work for the under-banked or those who do not have significant a pile of digital assets. DeFi needs to extend beyond over-collateralization in order for it to achieve more impact. There are a number of exciting Crypto projects working on this.

    Meet Goldfinch šŸ¦

    Goldfinch has provided QuickCheck with $1.45M debt since January 2020.

    Goldfinch is a decentralized protocol that allows for borrowing without crypto collateral. It is focused on reaching underserved emerging markets in Africa, South America, and Asia. In January 2022, Goldfinch raised $25M in funding from Andreessen Horowitz, Coinbase Ventures, SV Angel, Bill Ackman, and others. The startup previously raised $11M in June 2021.

    Goldfinch works by the interplay of four types of protocol participants:

    * Borrowers: Small- and medium-sized businesses seeking to borrow funds. Borrower Pools list the loan terms the Borrower seeks ex. interest rate, amount, and loan term. Borrowers typically request funds in USDC, the stablecoin backed 1:1 with US dollars.

    * Backers: Backers assess the Borrower Pools and determine whether they should provide first-loss capital. First-loss capital means that the Backers are eligible to receive a higher return on the loan than other capital providers but if the Borrower defaults, the Backers will be the first not to get paid.

    * Liquidity Providers (LP): LPs provide the senior line of credit to earn passive yield. They donā€™t have to actively assess every proposed Borrower. Rather, LP funds are invested if there is a sufficient level of commitment from Backers. When LPs provide senior credit, a portion of their interest is redirected to Backers to incentivize Backers to properly assess Borrowers.

    * Auditors: Auditors vote to approve Borrowers. They provide a human-level check to guard against fraud. Auditors are randomly

    Figure 2: Illustration of the Goldfinch protocol

    Once a loan has been issued, Borrowers make repayments to the Borrower Pool based on the interest rate and payment period. When the Borrowers pay more than the interest owed, the remainder is applied to the principal balance.

    The Borrower Pools have a Senior Tranche and a Junior Tranche. LPs provide funds for the Senior Tranche while Backers supply to the Junior Tranche. When the Borrower repays, the Borrower Pool first applies the funds to interest and principal owed to the Senior Tranche at that time, and the remaining funds are then applied to the Junior Trancheā€™s interest and principal balance.

    Backers and LPs receive an NFT when they initially supply capital. The NFT tracks the amount that was supplied and the amount that is still outstanding. NFTs ensure that no one can redeem more than their proportional share of the total repayments as they come in. For instance, if two Backers each supplied $1,000 for a total of $2,000 borrowed, and the Borrower has only paid back $400 thus far, the NFTs ensure that each Backer can only redeem up to $200, which is their portion of the repayments thus far, rather than each Backer racing to redeem the full $400 themselves.

    For more information on Goldfinch and how the protocol is structured and participants incentivized, please check out their white paper.

    Closing thoughts šŸ’­

    There is a tremendous and growing market for credit, especially in emerging markets like Nigeria. It is exciting to see crypto solutions like Goldfinch tackle this problem. But Nigeria has over 200 million people. Goldfinch is still a drop in the ocean of opportunity. Fortunately, technology does not scale linearly. Adoption could grow exponentially. I believe the market is big enough for many more players to emerge.



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit afolabio.substack.com
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  • Preamble

    My wife and I recently packed our bags and relocated to New Jersey! Texas was good for us but now we are on to our next adventure in Greater New York City. Would love to meet up if you are in the area.

    Itā€™s been fascinating observing peopleā€™s reactions when I say I work in crypto. Some acquaintances immediately start walking me through their crypto portfolio while others clutch their pearls and flee for dear life. Jokes aside, I am often the first person they have met who works in the space. Sometimes, I get the sense they donā€™t quite know what to make of me. Cryptoā€™s unsettling reputation has not been helped by the recent market downturn, hacks, and bankruptcies. My singular refrain has been that ā€œthe underlying technology could solve real-world problems, focus on thatā€.

    But you canā€™t bury your head in the sand and ignore the world around you. If you fail to study history, then you are bound to repeat the same mistakes. We are living through the early days of Cryptoā€™s history. Letā€™s learn from this moment lest we fall prey to the same dragons.

    Heartache šŸ’”

    Celsius - a prominent centralized crypto lending company - filed for bankruptcy on July 13, 2022. Customers had been unable to withdraw their funds since June 12, 2022. It now looks unlikely that they will ever reclaim all their funds. Some devastated customers have written letters to the judge presiding over the bankruptcy proceedings. These letters are gut-wrenching. Here are excerpts from two of them:

    But how did we get here?

    Celsius: BackgroundšŸ”Ž

    Celsius was founded in 2017 by Alex Mashinsky (CEO), Daniel Leon (former COO, now Chief Strategy Officer), and Nuke Goldstein (CTO) in Hoboken NJ. Celsius provides customers with high interest-bearing accounts for cryptocurrencies and crypto-collateral-backed loans.

    High interest-bearing crypto accounts

    Example 1: Johnny cashed out some of his cash savings and stock investments to buy 1 bitcoin on Coinbase. He then sees an ad from Celsius offering 17% interest rates for customers who deposit bitcoin with the company. He looks at his regular bank account and is reminded that Bank of America is only offering 0.1% interest. Itā€™s a no-brainer! Johnny moves his 1 bitcoin from Coinbase to Celsius to earn high interest.

    Crypto-collateral-backed loans

    Example 2: The price of bitcoin has more than doubled. Johnny is feeling good about his investment. Time to finally buy that engagement ring he has been eyeing. The price of bitcoin is $50k but he only needs $10k. However, Johnny doesnā€™t want to sell his bitcoin because he believes the price will be much higher in the future.

    Step 1: He transfers 0.3BTC valued at $15k as collateral for a $10k cash loan.

    Note: (a) There are no interest payments on the loan but he has 1-year to pay it back. (b) There are no credit checks because the loan is overcollateralized with a loan to value (LTV) ratio of 67% => $10k loan / $15k crypto collateral.

    Step 2: Celsius will monitor the LTV ratio as the price of bitcoin continues to fluctuate. If the price of bitcoin drops deeply, Johnny will have 24 hours to add more collateral or pay down the loan if the LTV hits the predetermined threshold ex 90%. If Johnny fails to bring the LTV back to an acceptable range say ~67% within the prescribed time then Celsius has the right to sell his collateral for cash.

    Besides lending, Celsius generated revenue from token sales, bitcoin mining, and discretionary trading of cryptocurrencies. As of June 2022, Celsius had lent out $8 billion to customers and had $12 billion in assets under management. The company had 450 employees and reportedly 1.7 million account holders.

    How did it go wrong?āš”

    TLDR: Celsius CEO said the company went bankrupt due to ā€œ..certain poor asset deployment decisionsā€. Basically, weak risk management. Unfortunately, this does not appear to be an isolated incident, rather, tales of poor decision-making and under-resourcing are emerging from different parts of the organization.

    On the surface, the main thrust of Celsius business model was sound. Itā€™s the same model that banks have used for centuries: pay interest to depositors then loan those funds out to another entity at a higher interest rate. Then you simply profit off the difference in interest rates.

    Celsius grew rapidly by offering up to a 17% interest rate on crypto deposits. At its peak, it had $24B of assets under management. This helped it raise $750M in Nov 2021 at $3.3B valuation. That fundraising round was led by the second largest pension fund in Canada. But it all came crashing down when Celsius filed for bankruptcy due to the $1.2B hole in its balance sheet.

    Celsius reported its total assets were $4.3B but total liabilities were $5.5B. Of the $5.5B liabilities, Celsius owes its customers $4.7B but does not have the assets to pay them. The company only has $125M cash on hand. Much of the $4.3B of assets are said to be Celsiusā€™ holdings of its own crypto token which has dropped in value from a peak of $7.7 in June 2021 to $0.9 in July 2022. There are questions about the current market value of the $4.3B listed assets and fears the actual is lower than what has been reported.

    Where did risk management fail?

    We are still learning about the failures that led to Celsius bankruptcy. Hereā€™s what I have gathered thus far:

    1. Failure of leadership

    Celsius executives reportedly told the Chief Human Resource Officer NOT to run background checks on the incoming CFO, Yaron Shalem. This is a major red flag šŸš© In Nov 2021, Shalem was arrested in Israel and charged with money laundering at his previous company.

    Perhaps stronger controls could have identified a CFO who might have steered Celsius away from taking on increasing levels of risk. But ultimately the CEO is responsible.

    2. Under resourcing

    Disruptors donā€™t color within the lines. They dream up new industries and take risks executing their visions. This is the nature of technological disruption. Uber and Airbnb are great examples of disruptors who launched products ahead of supporting laws, rules and regulations. The Silicon Valley swagger to move quickly and break things has produced resultsā€¦.but one wonders if it is a fit for financial services.

    Celsius reportedly only had 3 compliance professionals serving 1.7 million account holders. Some banks serving fewer customers might have 10 to 30x compliance professionals. A former Celsius compliance employee shared how the department was seen as a cost center and not a strategic partner for the business. One could extrapolate and imagine that the same attitude of under-resourcing likely applied to risk management too.

    3. Poor fund management

    Celsius CEO said in retrospect, they made poor fund deployment decisions. These decisions primarily fall into two camps: (a) over-leveraged positions and (b) over-exposure to stETH.

    (a) Overā€”leveraged positions:

    Celsius loaned out depositorsā€™ funds on MakerDAO, a decentralized lending platform. One loan is ~$550M. This loan is overcollateralized like the loans Celsius itself issues. One challenge is that the price of Bitcoin has tumbled more than 60% since the 2021 highs. As a result, Celsius has had to pay down the loan or provide more collateral to bring the LTV back in range, otherwise, the entire $550M collateral would be liquidated. Celsius likely used new customer deposits to secure the collateral consisting of old customer deposits. Celsius came close to losing $550M a couple of times. It has reportedly lost smaller amounts due to insufficient liquidity to shore up the LTV ratio.

    A sound risk management approach would have considered that crypto prices could fall significantly and perhaps limit Celsius exposure to this high-risk strategy.

    (b) Over-exposure to stETH

    Celsius used customer deposits to acquire over $400M of stETH, an irresponsible amount given that no counterparties hold a comparable amount to trade with. stETH is an illiquid receipt stoke for staked ether. stETH is a derivative of ether with each stETH representing one staked ether on the new Ethereum blockchain. However, the price of stETH and the price of ether decoupled in recent months, stETH now has a 3% discount at the time of writing.

    A sound risk management approach would have considered whether Celsius should have used userā€™s deposits to acquire stETH, and if decided to, there could have been controls to limit the amount of exposure to this illiquid asset in Celsius portfolio.

    What next for Celsius customers? ā­

    Celsius presented itself like a bank but operated more like a hedge fund. Many customers did not read the fine print in Celsius terms and conditions. Reading through now would yield several realizations.

    Uninsured deposits

    Depositors at US banks are protected by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). If a US bank goes bankrupt, all depositorsā€™ funds are insured for up to $250k. Unfortunately, Celsius is NOT a bank and did not hold any insurance for depositorā€™s funds.

    Section 13 of the Celsius user agreement explicitly states that if the company goes bankrupt, customers may not be able to recover ANY funds.

    Bankruptcy claims

    Celsius customers are filing bankruptcy claims. Some have also written letters petitioning the judge to release funds to them.

    Interestingly, although Celsius is headquartered in Hoboken NJ, the bankruptcy suit was filed in New Yorkā€™s Southern District. Judges in this district are thought to be more savvy and experienced with major bankruptcies having previously handled notable cases like Merril Lynch and Bernie Maddoff. Unfortunately, itā€™s not looking good for customers.

    What lessons have been learned? šŸ“”

    Not your keys, not your coins

    My friends who have been in crypto for several years frequently admonish everyone to move their holdings off centralized exchangers like Coinbase and lending platforms like BlockFi and Celsius. This episode has made the reasons painfully obvious. Itā€™s clear to see why they recommend one self custody crypto holdings in a cold wallet.

    Leadership matters

    It looks like Celsius executives lost their heads in the ecstasy of the bull market. They kept on layering on high risk moves perhaps imagining themselves to be invincible. But truth be told, I think the rot started way before the crypto bull market. The absence of background checks for senior executives, the under-resourcing of compliance are symptoms of a culture that turns its nose at the modern financial services industry. I agree that there are some financial services which are ripe for disruption but there are also risk management practices and standard operating procedures which have successfully safeguarded the interest of customers. These mustnā€™t be discarded with the bath water.

    Please do considerable research as you invest your funds. Look at the background and statements of the leaders. Sometimes people who are undisciplined with finances reveal themselves to be undisciplined with their words too.

    Real human impact

    1.7 million affected account holders may never fully recover their funds. This would undoubtedly leave a lasting bad impression. Some of the stories are simply heart-breaking. Thereā€™s the story of a worker close to retirement who sold off their stocks and bonds and deposited everything into Celsius. There are countless stories of families who put decades of life savings into these accounts. Some people will never recover financially. It must be taking a heavy emotional toll too. I fear, a few people may even take their own lives similar to the suicides following the Great Stock Market Crash of 1929.

    Diversify

    Please do NOT put all of your eggs in one basket. Diversify to reduce your exposure to any one platform and any one company. Consider moving some or all of your crypto holdings into multiple cold wallets and securely store them in waterproof, fireproof, and tamperproof environments.

    Risk management is a differentiator

    Crypto has been pulling in top talent from a variety of backgrounds. Sometimes I sense a tension between the tech-forward move fast crowd and the deliberate, cautious, and risk averse financial services crowd. But we need both legs to run into the future.

    The Celsius meltdown has given me a renewed appreciation for risk and compliance. In recent days, crypto lending companies have been at pains to explain their risk management approach and distance themselves from Celsius. I expect there could be a flight to quality, with consumers gravitating to more established and regulated providers. There is an opportunity for banks to make a move here.

    More curious about DeFi

    Humans are fallible. People get greedy and risky, then bad things happen. This is not limited to crypto. It happens across every industry. One of the beautiful things about decentralized finance (DeFi) is that it runs on smart contracts aka code. It takes the human out of the equation and executes based on the written code. But no system is infallible. DeFi solves for one risk - human behvaior - while heightening another risk: hackers. DeFi is poised to continue growth and eventually will underpin a chunky slice of the mass market.

    Brace yourself for more regulation

    Society functions around a set of rules of engagement. There are consequences when you break those rules. Every industry needs regulation. Crypto is no different. I hope that the regulation is thoughtful and not a knee-jerk reaction. I hope the regulation would seek to protect the consumer, not prevent the consumer from engaging with crypto. I hope the regulation is crafted in partnership with industry, seeking to support technology advancement and not strangle the baby in the bassinet.

    Iā€™m optimistic. Many advances we take for granted today went through a storming phase in their infancy. I have seen newspaper clips from the 1800s railing against electricity and cars. Today we canā€™t imagine our lives without them. I expect the US will eventually strike the right balance with crypto regulations.

    PS - But wait, thereā€™s more

    Thereā€™s more to the Celsius story. For instance, I didnā€™t get into the alleged token manipulation and potential insider trading.

    PSS - Former Coinbase PM arrested for insider trading

    Speaking of insider trading, this week, a former Coinbase product manager was arrested along with his brother and a friend for insider trading.

    Background

    There are about 2,000 crypto tokens. Binance lists over 300 of them on their exchange. Coinbase has been intentionally listing more tokens to close the gap and give their customers more choice. Coinbase currently lists about 200 tokens. Itā€™s been observed that new tokens experience a significant price jump once they are listed on Coinbase. It could be due to millions of users suddenly gaining access and increasing demand.

    The Coinbase PM obtained intelligence on which tokens would be listed then relayed it to his accomplices. The trio then got wallets controlled by other people to opportunistically buy and sell these tokens. They earned at least $1.5M through this insider trading scheme.

    Blockchain to the rescue

    Public blockchains permit anyone to view transactions. The challenge is that itā€™s not always obvious to the observer who owns the wallets but thatā€™s why blockchain analytics firms like Chainalysis, TRM Labs and Elliptic specalize in.

    An avid observer noticed this pattern of sales from a wallet. He shared his observations on Twitter. Soon financial regulators were hot on the chase and identified the trio and notified Coinbase. The Coinbase PM was invited to a meeting where at Coinbase where he was presumably fired. Regulators sent him a letter. He bought a ticket to fly home to India on the same day. The suspect was apprehended before he could flee the country.

    Contrary to some widely held beliefs, blockchain technology is not just a haven for would-be-criminals, rather, it can be a valuable tool for law enforcement to catch criminals.

    Itā€™s been long rumoured that there is significant insider trading at some crypto tokens. Perhaps this case is the first of many to come. The industry needs to police itself and partner with law enforcement.



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit afolabio.substack.com
  • Iā€™ve got a confession. (Cue Usherā€™s hit single ā€œConfessionsā€)

    I am not exactly sure what the metaverse is. There I said it. I feel so much lighter lol :-)

    Last year, ā€œmetaverseā€ burst onto our collective lexicon when Facebook announced it was reinventing itself as Meta. Mark Zuckerberg produced an hour-long video explaining what the metaverse was and how Facebook was going to engage in it. I didnā€™t watch the video then but I did see a few clips. It felt important. I felt like it must be a big deal if one of the worldā€™s richest men was betting his ENTIRE fortune on it. I didnā€™t want my ignorance to cost me this opportunity.

    So I started a little exploration. I spent part of my New Yearā€™s Eve in the Decentraland metaverse. I started buying a few metaverse tokens and invested in a metaverse-themed ETF. During the hype, I even considered buying some virtual land in the metaverse. Now to be clear, my investments were pretty limitedā€¦way less than 1% of my portfolio.

    But since Facebookā€™s fateful announcement, the worldā€™s most prestigious investment banks and consulting companies have published a slew of reports on the metaverse opportunity. Citi Bank forecast that the metaverse economy could be worth $13 trillion by 2030. The Boston Consulting Group (BCG) had a less bombastic view, forecasting that the metaverse economy would be worth $1.3 trillion by 2030. To put things in context, in 2021, the total value of the US car and automobile manufacturing market was $83B. The bottom line is this - some smart folks are saying the metaverse could be at least 12 times the US car market in 7.5 years. No one knows the future but there is some consensus that the metaverse could be BIG business.

    Okā€¦youā€™ve got me interested. But what is the metaverse??

    I have been digging trying to learn more. I finally watched the Zuckerberg metaverse video. I listened to a bunch of podcasts, watched more YouTube videos, read some essays, and flipped through a couple of decks. Iā€™m still organizing my thoughts and refining my thinking. Figured it might be helpful to share some of my preliminary thoughts. Letā€™s go!

    What is the metaverse?

    High school level definition

    The metaverse is a 3D version of the internet. It is a convergence of the physical and digital worlds.

    According to Matthew Ball, the metaverse represents the 4th wave of computing. The first three waves were mainframe computing, personal computing and mobile computing. So if the mobile era was defined by easy ability to get online, the metaverse era would be defined by always being online, this is called ambient computing.

    College-level definition

    According to Roundhill, the metaverse is the successor to the current internet that will be interoperable, persistent, synchronous, open to unlimited participants with a fully functioning economy, and an experience that spans the virtual and 'real' world.

    TLDR: the metaverse is an immersive, interactive environment generated by a computer.

    What is NOT the metaverse?

    Did you notice that none of the definitions mention virtual reality headsets? That was a big surprise to me. I had originally imagined a future where VR headsets became as common as cellphones are today. While I think sales of VR headsets are poised to going to continue rising, they are NOT required to access the metaverse. In fact, some of the closest metaverse-like experiences in gaming are accessible via cell phones.

    Side note - my jaw dropped when I recently learned that Meta sold 8.7 million Oculus VR headsets in 2021. Thatā€™s more unit sales than Xbox consoles in 2021! Do you have one? Iā€™m thinking about getting one to test it out. Sales of these VR headsets have doubled each year. Now Meta is opening up physical stores so more people can experience it firsthand.

    TLDR: VR headsets provide one way to access the metaverse but they wonā€™t be the only way to experience it.

    The metaverse must be experienced.

    One of my cousins in Nigeria told me how undergrads studying computer science did not have access to computers. They would write computer code by hand on paper and then submit their homework to professors to review. These students did not get the opportunity to actually run the code to see if the code did what it was supposed to do. They did not get to practice how to troubleshoot bugs in the code.

    We can all agree that this is a subpar way to learn. I think about the metaverse along similar lines. Itā€™s nice to read and write about it but ultimately one is best served by diving in and playing with the emerging technology. Itā€™s kinda like going back in time to the 1920s and trying to explain the internet to your neighbors. Not easy lol.

    Ok. Sounds nice but what problem does the metaverse solve?

    Iā€™m still ruminating on this. Right now, I think the metaverse could increase accessibility, remote collaboration, education, gaming, social relationships, industry, and more.

    a) Accessibility: One of my friends in college was a fountain of dry jokes and witty takes. She was also a triple major who graduated with a 4.0 GPA. But Iā€™ll never forget when she shared that she sometimes had to drop classes that she wanted to enroll in because the building was not wheelchair accessible. My heart sank. I did not realize that not all buildings on campus were wheelchair accessible or had elevators. This opened my eyes to the inequity of access. I hope the metaverse can extend access to people who might have different mobility abilities. But then I think about people who are visually impaired and hope access is somehow extended to them too.

    b) Remote collaboration: Iā€™m tired of Zoom. I love people and Iā€™m energized by engaging with people. But sitting in a chair going back-to-back on never-ending Zoom calls is draining. Itā€™s also often subpar when some coworkers are meeting in person and others are on Zoom. Last year, Bill Gates said that within 2-3 years most work meetings would be held in the metaverse. I laughed when he said it. I still think his timeline is unrealistic. But I hope he is directionally right. I hope a metaverse solution improves the Zoom experience. Perhaps a future where coworkers can use holograms or avatars in 3D to engage with each other and express more body language beyond facial expressions.

    c) Education: Letā€™s face it. Not all teachers are created equal. Some are very engaging and can bring a seemingly dry subject to life. But others struggle to impart knowledge to students. Students have different learning preferences. Students who are strong audio-learners are advantaged in the existing education system. Now imagine if students had the opportunity to travel through time and space to experience natural phenomena and historical events. Imagine if instead of memorizing the planets you could see them close up and see the icy rings around Saturn. Or be on the front row as Abraham Lincoln gave the Gettysburg Address. Imagine if medical students could go on a safari through a humanā€™s veins and arteries to learn about heart disease. These immersive experiences would be resonant and more engaging. Researchers say immersive experiences lead to 30% greater retention. This increased understanding could trigger more technological breakthroughs. Iā€™m excited!

    d) Social relationships: When my grandpa went to medical school in England in the 1930s, his letters would travel 6-10 weeks before they reached his parents in Nigeria. Today my family is spread out across Africa, Europe, and North America. Video calls and cell phones have made the world feel much smaller. But I hope the metaverse could take it to the next level. It would be amazing for my parents to have more immersive experiences with their grandchildren. My nieces are becoming more curious about our culture and heritage, it would be amazing if my parents spend even more time with them and give could give them a virtual tour of our ancestral village or the cities they grew up in. Obviously, I donā€™t think the metaverse would be a perfect substitute for in-person interaction but I think it could be a bridge over oceans and great distances.

    e) Industry: According to McKinsey, BMW was designing its most advanced manufacturing plant when a team member suggested they build a virtual replica in the metaverse before beginning construction. So they did! BMW executives and technologists were able to physically tour the metaverse plant. Soon they realized 30% of the design choices were not ideal. They significantly revised the designs before proceeding to construction. Testing it out before construction led to substantial financial cost savings.

    Sounds goodā€¦.what are the downsides?

    In life, you gotta take the rain with the sunshine.

    a) Terror risks in 3D: Technology is neither good nor bad, it all rests on the application. Unfortunately, bad actors are often early adopters of new technology. Terrorist groups have leveraged Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter to find and radicalize young people. The same may become true in the metaverse. In fact, the metaverse might provide better tools to train terrorists. We will need to develop new counter-terrorism tools.

    b) Loss of person-to-person contact. The pandemic illuminated the loneliness crisis in many Western countries. Many of us coped with the social-distancing measures by increasing our time spent on social media. But for thousands of years, humans have needed person-to-person interaction to sustain wellness. It remains to be seen if the metaverse will be able to replicate this interaction.

    c) Too much tech. Iā€™m embarrassed by how much time I spend looking at screens. Iā€™m usually working on a laptop, scrolling on my phone, or watching TV on a big screen. No wonder my eye prescription keeps getting progressively worse! Should we be concerned that there is too much technology in our lives? I wonder if the rise of the metaverse will drive the appreciation of natural, in-person activities. It might become a luxury to travel in real life. We might see more people yearning for eco-tourism vacations where they are cut off from technology.

    Whatā€™s going in the metaverse today?

    Do you remember when newspapers uploaded a scanned copy of their publication on their website? Over time, newspapers have developed internet-native publications that have functionalities that were not possible with a paper copy. For instance, newspapers can target ads with much greater precision today. They are able to get much more detailed feedback on how readers respond to their articles and headlines.

    I think the metaverse might be similar. Initially, companies will copy and paste existing models into the metaverse but over time they will develop new metaverse-native models with functionalities that were not possible with the 2D-internet.

    Do you remember the first concert you went to? Mine was loud, sweaty, and crowded, but so much fun. We stood shoulder-to-shoulder, singing at the top of our voices waving our hands while awkwardly dancing with a cold beverage in hand. Todayā€™s tweens and teens are having a very different experience. Cathy Hackel, self-proclaimed queen of the metaverse, shared how her 10-year-old sonā€™s first concert was a virtual one on Roblox! But this was no isolated incident. In 2020, Travis Scott made headlines when his concert in Fortnite was attended by 12.3 million people (link to the concert). [FYI - Roblox and Fortnite are both gaming platforms].

    Side note on gaming:

    In 2010, Chris Dixon famously said that the next big thing would first look like a toy. Gaming is a big business and a gateway to the metaverse.

    Fortnite is the blockbuster video game produced by Epic Games. Epic is privately held so financial details are limited. However, we know that in 2020, Fortnite had 80.1 million monthly active users. 63% of its players are aged 18-24. 38% of users spent more than 10 hours a week playing Fortnite.

    Roblox appeals to an even younger demographic. According to Roblox, two-thirds of US children aged 9-12 use its platform. In 2021, Roblox earned $1.9B of revenue from 45.5 million daily active users who spent 41.4 billion hours engaged on the platform.

    I am highlighting these because Iā€™m not a big gamer..yet. And as a millennial, Iā€™m beginning to feel a lil old lol. I am recognizing that I may have a big technology blindspot because gaming is often on the bleeding edge of technology. Gaming could give a preview of what might go mainstream.

    Meta is NOT alone

    Meta is not the only major company investing in the metaverse. Microsoft, Apple, and Alphabet are reportedly pouring billions into it too. This year, Accenture, the global consulting company, will onboard over 100,000 new employees through its metaverse platform. This all started at the height of the pandemic. New employees were sitting at home remotely going through 16-24 hours of Zoom presentations. Definitely not an ideal experience. And so Accenture changed things up! They sent each new employee a virtual reality headset. The new hires then created customized avatars (cartoon-like representations of themselves) and were guided to Accentureā€™s metaverse headquarters. They were put into small teams and worked on simulations to solve customer problems. Crucially, there were opportunities to have 1-on-1 and small group conversations. Partners who often have tight travel schedules were able to readily welcome the new employees from anywhere in the world.

    Who knows? Maybe in a couple of years, it may be common for new employees to get a new company laptop AND a virtual reality (VR) headset. Times are changing!

    Whatā€™s next?

    More baby steps forward. The metaverse is very much in its infancy. It requires advances across a range of technologies such as 5G, 3D graphics, virtual reality, augmented reality, and cryptocurrency to move forward. Itā€™s going to take a while. The current hype will simmer down but the building will continue. But I think mass-market adoption will gradually deepen over the next 5-20 years. Itā€™s time to pay attention so you can make the most of this opportunity.

    So what do you think about the metaverse? I would love to hear from you.

    Onwards & Upwards,

    Afolabi



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit afolabio.substack.com
  • Hey yā€™all!

    This will NOT be a typical newsletter.

    I started writing as a forcing mechanism to learn more about crypto. It has been fun. Along the way, Iā€™ve learned a ton, made new friends, started Bitcoin mining, and got a new full-time job in crypto. Thank you for coming on this journey of discovery with me.

    The vision of 5x5 Crypto was to simply explain the 5 most important developments in crypto in about 5 minutes. Lately, it has become a drag to consistently produce weekly updates. The truth is that I am no longer satisfied with just reporting news developments in crypto. I want to go deeper. I want to explore real-world use cases of crypto. I am curious about doing more analytical pieces. Itā€™s time to dream again.

    Introducing Crypto IRL

    I am repositioning the newsletter. Introducing: ā€œCrypto IRLā€. My goal is to explore crypto in real life. I aim to produce 1-2 publications each month on a variety of topics. I have a list of topics that I want to explore and I canā€™t wait to dive in. Lately, I have been thinking about the metaverse, Bitcoin mining profitability, and crypto applications in Africa. Let me know if there are topics you would like for me to explore.

    But crypto markets are crashingā€¦

    Yeah. Crypto markets have tumbled lately. My conviction is unchanged. I am still investing weekly. I had been waiting for a price crash since Q3/Q4 last year. But it seems that Crypto Winter has finally arrived. It was expected. Crypto has historically had multi-year cycles of ā€œsummerā€ (price rise) followed by ā€œwinterā€ (price crash)ā€¦with each new summer rising to a new high. Veterans say the Crypto Winter is when serious building happens. Itā€™s the time when fair-weather fans fade into the background. Itā€™s the time when oneā€™s conviction is tested. Itā€™s the time to go deeper and explore. This is the perfect time to pivot. Will you join me?

    You donā€™t have to do anything. You will receive the new publication in your email. Please stay tuned. I hope you enjoy this new season. If you do, please be sure to forward it to your friends :-)

    I hope you and your family have a wonderful week ahead.

    Onwards & Upwards,

    Afolabi



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit afolabio.substack.com
  • Hey yā€™all!

    Did you hear the remarkable story of how an inexperienced passenger safely landed a plane when the pilot became incapacitated? Hereā€™s some background:

    I listened to the recording of the passenger calmly explaining the situation to the air traffic controller multiple times. I listened intently as the air traffic controller steadily guided the passenger to land the plane. And he did it! He safely landed the plane.

    I was struck by how calm and measured the passenger was. He had a pregnant wife at home. This was a potentially fatal situation. His whole life was at stake! One might have expected to hear the terror, fear, and shock in his voice. There was none. I guess he is ā€˜built differentā€™.

    God forbid, if I were in a similar situation, I hope I can be as calm and measured as he was. How do you react when your world is turned upside down? Well, the crypto and stock markets have taken us on a downward heading rollercoaster these past few weeks. How have you dealt with it? Are you ā€˜built differentā€™ too?

    Thoughts on ā€˜Built differentā€™

    I am often intrigued by how multiple people could have the same experience but polar reactions to it. For instance, we have all experienced the recent plunge in the stock and crypto market, some folks have been writhing in pain and selling off assets while others have been pleasantly buying up investments at ā€˜bargainā€™ prices. Thereā€™s also a group of people who are steadily executing their investment strategy, unfazed by the market turbulence. Iā€™m in the last group but Iā€™m fixinā€™ to go bargain shopping.

    In management consulting, we often heard the refrain ā€œmanage expectationsā€. It is key because disappointment occurs when our expectations fall short of reality. Increasing a companyā€™s profitability by 20% within 1 year is neither good nor bad. Itā€™s only when you factor in expectations that one is able to define the performance. If the companyā€™s CEO was expecting a 30% increase in profitability, then 20% suddenly looks like a shoddy disappointment. However, if the CEO was expecting a 10% increase, then the 20% result is an impressive feat worth celebrating with bonuses and promotions. Managing expectations is key.

    If you are a long-term subscriber, youā€™ll know that Iā€™ve been waiting for ā€œcrypto winterā€ since the end of Q3 2021. You might also know that Iā€™ll be unsurprised if the price of Bitcoin fell back to the $10k level or lower but then surge to new highs, dare I say six figures, in the next bull run in a couple of years. This is not based on any technical analysis. Rather, I have glanced at the historical performance of Bitcoin (a proxy for the wider crypto market) and recognized that large price swings are part of the process but over the long term, the price tends to go up. Iā€™m managing expectations Iā€™m in this for the long haul. Over the past seven Mays (2016-2022), the value of the S&P 500 stock market has increased 2x while Bitcoin price has increased 67x. Zooming out can provide a helpful perspective.

    Tail events and a flight to quality

    I recently read ā€œTails you winā€, an article by Morgan Housel. He reminds us that most results are due to tail events.

    For instance, out of 21,000 VC investments between 2004 and 2014, 65% lost money, 2.5% made 10-20x, 1% achieved more than 20x returns. Incredibly, only about 0.5% or 100 companies achieved the glamorized 50x returns. The vast majority of the industry returns are due to a tiny fraction of investments. We glamorize and idolize these investments and some of us even aspire to make similar 50x returns too. But the odds are not in our favor. Morganā€™s analysis on the VC market was not shocking but I had not fully considered what he said next: that tail events drive the vast majority of results is a truism of nature and other disciplines.

    Each human is a miracle. Just one sperm out of the millions deposited, gets to fertilize the egg and develop into a baby. Or consider that in 2020, just 5 companies (Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsfot and Tesla) accounted for a whopping 37% of the S&P 500ā€™s total market returns. [S&P 500 consists of 500 publicly traded companies]. Warren Buffett famously said that he has owned 400-500 stocks during his life but he made most of his fortune from just 10 of themā€¦.despite painstaking research and analysis on all of them.

    So what does this mean for crypto? Well, extending the analogy would suggest that the just a handful of crypto tokens will stand the test of time and generate the lion share of returns. Looking back at snapshots in time between Dec 2016 and today, indicates that only 3 tokens: Bitcoin, Ethereum and Ripple, have consistently made the top 10 list. This is not say that other projects will not stand the test of time. But if you are looking to build and sustain long-term value, these might be a helpful place to start. Of course, do your own research as Iā€™m not a financial adviser.

    Warren Buffet also famously said that ā€œyou should be fearful when others are greedy but greedy when others are fearfulā€. Fortunes are made in downturns. There may be attractive opportunities to acquire high-quality crypto and stocks at ā€œbargainā€ prices.

    The reality is that it takes a lot of discipline to execute on this strategy. Plus no one knows if the prices will drop further. Personally, I have focused on dollar-cost-averaging i.e. consistently investing in cryptos and stocks on a weekly or monthly schedule irrespective of market conditions. Itā€™s all automated.

    The Terra-sized elephant in the room

    The biggest story in crypto has been the Terra Luna collapse. It might rank in the top 5 most catastrophic events in crypto. Terra was an algorithmic stablecoin. I did not have any exposure to it although I have friends and cousins who did. Many other people more knowledgeable than me have touched on this topic. If you are interested, check out this Twitter thread

    Speaking

    I recently participated in an industry panel for the Black Professionals in Tech Network (BPTN) on blockchain. It was great fun. I really enjoyed the audience questions and engaging with other panelists and the event sponsor CIBC.

    Next up, Iā€™ll be leading a company-wide lunch and learn on ā€œGlobal perspectives in cryptoā€ at Cross River (~800 people). My goal is to bring stories of how people are using crypto around the world to solve problems in their lives. Wish me luck!

    Thatā€™s all folks! I hope you have a great week. Get outside and enjoy the sun!

    Ciao

    Afo



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit afolabio.substack.com
  • What a difference a year makes! About a year ago the price of Bitcoin hit $63k, today itā€™s $43k (-30% YoY). But attendance at the annual Bitcoin conference in Miami increased 2.5x to 30,000 people this year. So whatā€™s the deal? Let me tell you a little secret: itā€™s not just about price.

    The conference itself is a bit of a sideshow. Tons of people I know went to Miami without stepping foot in the convention center. A lot of the action happens behind closed doors in meeting rooms, rooftop bars, and yachts. Investors, builders, technologists and enthusiast converge for one week in the sun to network and get things done.

    Bitcoin 2022 key takeaways

    Bitcoin magazine, the organizers of the conference, posted videos of panels and speeches on their YouTube channel. Iā€™ll highlight some of the

    CashApp launches 3 new Bitcoin services

    * Get Paid in Bitcoin enables CashApp users to auto-invest a portion of their paycheck into bitcoin.

    * Bitcoin Roundups enables CashApp users to round up payments to the nearest dollar then buy bitcoin with the difference.

    * Lightning Network integration enables users to receive Bitcoin in Cash App through the Lightning Network. The ability to send bitcoin through that network was enabled in January.

    My thoughts:

    * CashApp is key to onboarding people. The fast-growing app has 30 million monthly users. But the demographic is younger and more diverse than the typical bank account holder. CashApp knows that culture leads finance. They routinely partner with hip-hop stars like Megan the Stallion and Lil Nas X for cash and Bitcoin giveaways. This helps drive adoption and builds goodwill for the brand.

    * CashApp meets people where they are: Offering bank-like features like auto-investing and roundup is familiar to the average Joe. Additionally, CashApp excels where crypto falters, CashApp user experience is simple and easy to follow. Building out auto-investing would produce a baseline of steady income for Block (owners of CashApp). Itā€™s a win-win.

    * Walled gardens to open fields: Today you can only send funds to people who have the same app. So now I have a zillion apps on my phoneā€¦ugh. For example, I only use CashApp to pay my barber but then I use PayPal to pay my powerlifting coach. CashApp and PayPal are walled gardens, they are not interoperable. Imagine if you could ONLY send emails to people who had a GMail account. That would be incredibly annoying. We would all end up with a zillion email accounts. But in the future we should be able to pay like we email. The future is wide open fields not walled gardens. The Lightning Network can help us get there. But we need more businesses to integrate the Lightning Networkā€¦.

    Robinhood is integrating Lightning Network āš”

    * 6 months ago Robinhood announced it was launching a Digital Asset wallet. It quickly garnered a waitlist with over 2 million people

    * This week, Robinhood announced that it would integrate Lightning Network to enable faster Bitcoin transactions

    * This is meaningful as Robinhood has over 22 million users. Like CashApp, its users tend to be younger than the typical bank account holder. So far only about 10% have indicated interest in the crypto wallets but I expect that could grow with time. 2 million is good but we need a LOT more integrations to the Lightning Networkā€¦.

    Strike integrates Shopify and NCR (largest POS operator)āš”

    * Jack Mallers, CEO of Strike, announced that they are integrating the Lightning Network into Shopify and NCR. This is a HUGE deal.

    * Shopify is the third-largest online retailer in the US behind Amazon and eBay. There are over 1.1 million live stores on Shopify in the US and another 1.2 million around the world

    * NCR is the largest point-of-sale (POS) operator. POS machines are the gadgets we swipe our cards in to pay for goods and services as we are checking out of the grocery stores, coffee shops etc.

    * These integrations would enable millions of merchants to transact using the Lightning Network. Access would be extended to brands, merchants and stores that you are familiar with.

    * The cool thing is that this integration would enable customers to pay in Bitcoin or stablecoins or even dollars. Exciting times ahead. But the question is, will we see adoption?

    * I donā€™t know. Why?

    * #HODL: I donā€™t want to part with my Bitcoin today because I believe the price will be higher 5-10 years from now.

    * Inertia: The typical person would default to continue paying the same way unless there is a trigger. There needs to be significant benefit or cost to trigger behavior modification. For international payments, Lightning Network is cheaper, faster, and more convenient to use than some existing options. But domestic paymentsā€¦I think the interoperability between walled gardens could be one driver. I think merchants stand to save money on interchange fees by switching to the Lightning Network, it would make sense for some merchants to offer discounts to customers who pay with the Lightning Network. But other than that, am I missing something?

    Lightning Labs āš”

    * The leading Bitcoin developer has raised $70M in itā€™s Series B from Valor Equity Partners and global asset manager Baillie Gifford, both early backers of Tesla and SpaceX; Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev, NYDIG and Silvergate CEO Alan Lane.

    * The goal is to transform the network into a multi-asset layer atop Bitcoin. The first step would be to add stablecoins. Lightning would enable fast and high volume stablecoin transactions. In the future, other asset types like NFTs could be added too.

    Whatā€™s on my mind

    Walk to earn šŸ‹ļøā€ā™‚ļø

    I like fitness. I like making money.

    This week, I discovered Fitness + Money = ā€œwalk-to-earnā€. Have you heard about this?

    There are a couple apps where you sign-up for a workout commitment e.g., walk 10,000 steps a day then you get get paid in crypto for following through. I havenā€™t signed up yet but Iā€™m immediately think whatā€™s the catch? So far, it looks like some of these apps require you to buy some tokens and perhaps you get penalized if you donā€™t follow through.

    Check out Step and learn more here.

    I hope you spend sometime outside this week. Itā€™s spring and the weather has been glorious. Iā€™m aiming to walk outside for at least 30 min every day. Join me!

    Ciao

    Afo



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit afolabio.substack.com
  • Weekly rant: Is Bitcoin religion?

    The crescent moon was spotted. Ramadan is here.

    This is a particularly holy time for the 4.5 billion Muslims, Jews and Christians around the world. Muslims are fasting from sunrise to sunset for a month. Jews are preparing for Passover. Catholics are giving up vices to observe Lent as all Christians gear up for Easter.

    But the world is losing religion. Mosque, synagogue and church attendance have been falling in the West. Is Bitcoin the new religion?

    The similarities are eerie.

    Bitcoin maxis seek to evangelize and orange-pill non-believers much in the same way a missionary might seek to convert a pagan. The Bitcoin crowd flocks to Twitter Bitcoin celebrities like the faithful grasp on to every word uttered by televangelists. The plebs tweeting condemnation at Ethereum enthusiasts are reminiscent of the fundamentalist ferociously yelling that all sinners are going to hell. Some tout Bitcoin as the solution to all the sorts of problems just as the devout look to God. But I guess the difference is that we have not had any Bitcoin holy warsā€¦.so much blood has been shed in the name of religion. Hopefully Bitcoin does not add to the tally.

    This week, Miami will host Bitcoin 2022 - the single largest crypto conference in the world. Brace yourself. Itā€™s going to be an eventful week. Many of the speeches will likely be a rehash of content one can already find online but I expect some major announcements. Controversially, President Bukele of El Salvador is set to give a speech. I have mixed feelings about him. On the one hand, I admire a technology-forward leader. At the same time, Iā€™m disturbed by reports of human rights abuses and corruption. Sigh. This reminds me of the early days when Bitcoin was adopted by Silk Road and other unsavory characters. I hope mass media focuses on the underlying technology not the cast of early adopters. The reality is that savvy criminals adopt new technology to evade police tactics. This is not new. Donā€™t throw the baby away with the bath water.

    NEWS šŸ–ØšŸ“œ

    1. Cross River raises $620M Series D

    * Full disclaimer: I joined Cross Riverā€™s Crypto team at the end of last year. We are hiring šŸ˜

    * Funds were raised from an enviable set of investors including Andreessen Horowitz and T Rowe Price. Cross River cut itā€™s teeth by providing infrastructure for the FinTech revolution. The next phase of growth will come from doubling down, expanding internationally and developing new crypto solutions.

    * Now that we have raised more resources, itā€™s time to execute. Come build with us. For more info - check out this Tech Crunch article and our website. DM me with questions.

    2. Bitcoin Miner goes public via SPAC šŸ“ˆ

    * PrimeBlock, a US-based Bitcoin miner, plans to go public through a merger with a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) for an estimated enterprise value of $1.25B

    * PrimeBlock has over 110 MW of installed data center capacity across 12 facilities in North America. It sources ~60% of itā€™s power from non-carbon emitting sources. In Q4 2021, it generated about $25M revenue in Q4 2021.

    * Some investors unwilling or unable to directly purchase Bitcoin have gotten exposure by purchasing shares of publicly traded Bitcoin mining companies like RIOT Blockchain. Shares of Bitcoin miners tends to move in sync with the price of Bitcoin. See below:

    * Personally, I prefer to hold the real thing rather than a proxy. Do your own research!

    3. Axie Infinity: Hackers steal $600MšŸ˜±šŸ˜³šŸ„“

    * Iā€™m a bullish about play-to-earn games. I think thereā€™s tremendous opportunities for them to grow in developing countries with high unemployment and young populations. Axie Infinity is the darling of play-to-earnā€¦.this makes the news of this hack all the more devastating.

    * Hereā€™s what I have gathered: Hackers used social engineering and took advantage of a human error to get away with $600M worth of Ethereum and USDC in the Ronin bridge. The bridge is kinda like a bank for the game. For context, Axie Infinity allows players to trade characters and win earnings which can then be exchanged for ETH or USDC and withdrawn for use in the real world.

    * The impact was swift: 34% drop in volume of trading in the Axie Marketplace within a day (according to DappRadar). But many Axie players while frustrated, have continued to play on.

    * Investors in SkyMavis, the owners of Axie Infinity, include Mark Cuban, Alexis Ohanian, and Animoca Brands. SkyMavis said that they will make impacted players whole. Goshā€¦I hope they have insurance for thatā€¦.I doubt it.

    * Unfortunately, this hack is not an isolated incident. Over the past year, hackers have exploited weaknesses in Ronin bridges to steal over $1B.

    * The Philippines is the biggest market for the game where there are over 2.5 million players. The road to Axie Infinity growing 10x to 25 million players will be paved with tougher security.

    4. US crypto policy debate heating upšŸ’µšŸ›

    * President Bidenā€™s executive order on crypto intensified ongoing debates around how to regulate crypto

    * This week, Sen Elizabeth Warren (D) once again voiced her support for the US to issue a Central Bank-backed Digital Currency (CBDC). She thinks a well designed CBDC could drive out private digital currencies like Bitcoin and improve safety and efficiency of the market. Opponents fear the CBDC would give the US government unprecedented surveillance over citizens. Additionally they fear that a CBDC which the Federal Reserve could issue at will would not be sound hard money. Rather, an extension of the current system where the US government printed printed billions of dollars over the past 2 years whereas Bitcoin is a deflationary store of value by design. There will only be 21 million Bitcoin.

    * Sen Cynthia Lummis (R) is working on a new bill that would propose rules to clarify the role of the SEC and other agencies and provide definitions that would classify many popular tokens as securities.

    * The definition of whether a token is a security is key. If tokens like Solana are deemed to be securities then they would need to be registered with the SEC, crypto exchanges would need to delist them or become broker-dealersā€¦and a host of other adjustments. The net effect is that they would likely increase the cost of serving the customer. That said, there may be some consumer benefits. I need to dig more into this.

    Thatā€™s all folks!

    I hope you have a great week ahead.

    Thank you

    Afo



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit afolabio.substack.com
  • Is the economy gonna boom or bust? Lately, this question has been popping up everywhere. The Russia-Ukraine conflict has pushed oil prices sky high, inflation has been soaring and many people are feeling the pinch in their wallets. So whatā€™s the deal? Apparently, the answer lies in menā€™s underwearšŸ©²

    Alan Greenspan, former head of the Federal Reserve, once said that sales of menā€™s underwear are a key economic predictor. The theory is that menā€™s underwear are discretionary spendingā€¦no one sees them except when men change in the locker room or when they are about toā€¦.šŸ˜ˆ. BUT when the economy is bad, men postpone replacing their tired, worn, nasty underwear. This theory proved true during the 2008 recession. I found a study across 56 countries that explored this topic. The takeaway is that the theory does not hold true across all countriesā€¦Researchers found a strong correlation between menā€™s underwear sales and economic performance in Kuwait (0.903), Armenia (0.914), Ecuador (0.917) whereas there was a negative correlation in Cyprus (-0.966), France (-0.955), and Mexico (-0.940).

    Friends, I have got one question for you: do you plan to buy more underwear in the next 30 days? Fill out this anonymous survey šŸ˜

    On my mind šŸ§ 

    Crypto for goodšŸ’–

    I have 60 first cousins. I recently had a nice long chat with one of them. During the pandemic she and her husband buckled down and refocused. The result: they doubled their income over the past yearšŸ™Œ.ā€¦.BUT they are not any happier.

    Instinctively, I know this to be true. Beyond a certain point, additional money does not yield more happiness. In fact, it might be the opposite! The great poet Biggie said it best ā€œMoā€™ money, moā€™ problemsā€.

    Donā€™t get me wrong. I am an ambitious person. I want more. One of my goals is to leave an inheritance for my grandchildren. That said, I have come to realize that achieving that ā€œnumberā€ wonā€™t necessarily make me any happier. Life is unpredictable. There will be tears and laughterā€¦.SO if you are guaranteed to cry, is it not better to cry in a Rolls Royceā€¦(or a Lucid for me) versus a broken down and unreliable dumpster fire of a car? šŸ¤£

    But what would make me happier? Impact. Positive impact.

    This week was the 15th anniversary of my maternal grandpaā€™s passing. He was a phenomenal human being. A simple, hardworking, ambitious, and kind man. Grandpaā€™s life was transformed by a scholarship in 4th grade. Through grit and grace, he became a doctor then the Chief Medical Officer of Nigeria. He directly treated thousands of patients but his influence positively impacted millions.

    Unlike a bunch of my cousins, I decided not to become a doctor. Instead, Iā€™m going Otolorin (in Yoruba this means ā€œchoosing a separate pathā€) in crypto. But the shared values endure. I have always been guided by potential for impact as I have navigated my career journey.

    This brings me to crypto. Too often people focus on price but miss the underlying technology. I believe crypto can be a force for good by solving real world problems. I want to dig in and learn more about these solutions. Would you be interested in a series where I highlight some of the solutions, people, and technologies addressing real world problems? Vote here. Tell me what you would like to see or not.

    NewsšŸ“°

    1. Ukraine: First Crypto war, now NFTs?šŸ•¶šŸ•Æ

    * Itā€™s been said that Russiaā€™s invasion of Ukraine is the first crypto war, now NFTs are getting in on it too.

    * Given West Africaā€™s colonial past, Iā€™m painfully aware that it is the victor who gets to write history. The Ukrainian government is establishing an NFT collection memorializing the war - presumably it would feature stories of Russian atrocities and Ukrainian courage. Each piece will be art representing a story from a trusted source written onto an unchangeable, globally distributed blockchain

    * The funds raised from the sales would support humanitarian relief. Would you get in on this?

    2. Russia accept Bitcoin for oil and gas ā›½ļø

    * On the other side of the conflict, Russia has been increasingly isolated by Western countries

    * Now, the Russian government is indicating that they may soon start accepting bitcoin payments for oil and gas sales

    * This is part of a larger story where the US dollar, some say the ā€œpetrodollarā€, is being challenged as the de facto currency for global oil trade. When China buys oil from Saudi Arabia, they pay in US dollars. Isnā€™t that odd? If you lived in the US but wanted to buy avocados from Mexico, would you pay for them in Nigerian Nairaā€¦I donā€™t think so! But there is a history and reason why it is that way today. And now itā€™s been challenged by Chinaā€™s Yuanā€¦and also Bitcoin. There could implications for the US economy if this catches on at scaleā€¦thatā€™s a whole ā€˜nother conversation.

    3. Big oil is mining Bitcoin šŸ¤ 

    * I love it when my worldā€™s collideā€¦.for context, I started my career in in oil & gas as an engineer then a market analystā€¦..now this week, ExxonMobil disclosed that it has been mining Bitcoin with waste natural gas in North Dakota

    * Exxon is reportedly also considering Bitcoin mining projects around the world including Nigeria, Argentina, and Germany. Exxon is far from being alone in this endeavor. ConocoPhillips are other companies have been doing so for sometime.

    * Last year, a friend and I evaluated starting a company to mine bitcoin with flared gas in Nigeria. We had some deep concerns and it did not progress. Iā€™m feeling wistful reading about Exxon executing on this ideaā€¦.maybe we should have perseveredā€¦maybe itā€™s not too late?

    4. First fashion week in the metaversešŸ’‹šŸ’…šŸ•“šŸŽ«šŸ›

    * Calling all fashionistas! The first Metaverse Fashion Week (MVFW) is upon us.

    * Decentraland is hosting the MVFW from March 24-27 featuring over 60 established and digital-native brands including the likes of Estee Lauder to Forever 21.

    * Attendees can snag NFT wearables, listen to expert panels and have fun at after partiesā€¦all in the metaverse. Also, thereā€™s a robot named Sophia who will be walking around wearing the latest NFT wearables. If you spot her in the metaverse, you can snap a selfie and enter a giveaway!

    5. Gov of Florida: You should be able to pay your taxes in BitcoinšŸ‘Øā€āœˆļø

    * Itā€™s tax season! Gov DeSantis of Florida wants to make it possible for businesses to pay taxes in Bitcoin. But why just businesses? You have to remember that there are no personal income taxes in the Sunshine State. I think this is probably more gimmick than substance because why would you pay your taxes with an appreciating asset (Bitcoin) instead of a depreciating one (dollars)? Nonetheless, this move is not surprising as Miami has been positioning itself as an epicenter for the crypto industry.

    * Itā€™s particularly meaningful because Gov DeSantis is one of the frontrunners to be the Republican candidate for President in the next election. At the very least, he could bring introduce the topic at the national level.

    * But Florida wonā€™t be the first! That crown belongs to Colorado. Earlier this month, the Centennial State became the first to accept crypto for tax payments. Itā€™s expected to go into effect in June! In Colorado, the plan is to accept crypto payments BUT convert them into dollars for deposit in the stateā€™s treasury. I guess the next move would be to hold crypto on the stateā€™s balance sheet. Which state is going to be the first to do that?

    Thatā€™s all folks. I hope you have a great week. Remember April Foolā€™s Day is on Friday!

    O dabo

    Afo

    Thank you for reading 5x5 Crypto News. This post is public so feel free to share it.



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  • Hey yā€™all!

    I hope you had a terrific week! Iā€™m visiting New Jersey this week. I checked into my hotel, walked towards the elevator when I ran into this:

    This is a first! Iā€™ve seen Bitcoin ATMs before but never in a hotel. The narrative Iā€™d heard was that there are 2 main sets of Bitcoin ATM users in the US. The first set are immigrants. They buy and send Bitcoin as a means of sending and saving funds for loved ones in their home countries ex Venezuela, Mexico and Nigeria. This is particularly helpful for people who might be undocumented migrants in the US - they may not be able to have a conventional bank account. The second set are people who value anonymity. They like to use cash to buy Bitcoin.

    Have you used a Bitcoin ATM? If yes, what was your use case? What was your experience?

    Personally, I donā€™t love them because the fees are way higher than crypto exchanges. I am curious about the economics of owning Bitcoin ATMs. Might be a interesting side hustle to pursue. Maybe Iā€™ll do a deep dive to investigate assess first.

    On my mindšŸ§ 

    Introducing the worldā€™s first Bitcoin mortgage: Milo! šŸš€

    Background

    * Milo! Depending on where you grew up, the word ā€œMilo!ā€ evokes memories of a sweet chocolatey drink ā˜• or the 10th mayor of Tel Aviv. Iā€™m in the first group. Yum!

    * Milo Credit is a global digital bank founded in 2018 to reshape mortgages for global consumers. Most people around the world donā€™t have access to a mortgage. They often never own a home. Many of those that do gradually build a house painstakingly over years as their funds allow.

    * This month, Milo Credit launched the first Bitcoin mortgage. They are offering 30-year mortgages up to 100% of the house cost as long as you provide surplus Bitcoin collateral. The interest rates are low and payment plans are flexible and adjustable.

    * So for example, if you wanted to buy a $200k condo, you might be required to provide $300k Bitcoin collateral. Milo establishes a minimum LTV (loan-to-value) - itā€™s 67% ($200k/$300k) in this example . My guess is that you would get a lower interest if you provide significantly higher collateral.

    * But thatā€™s not all. We all know that the price of Bitcoin can be volatile. Milo would monitor the LTV ratio as the price of Bitcoin evolves. Milo would set a LTV ratio at which the borrower would need to either provide more Bitcoin or pay down the loan. Milo might also set an LTV ratio at which the borrower goes into default or loses the collateral. Iā€™d love to learn more about the fine prints.

    * So continuing the example, if the price of Bitcoin dropped by 50%. The LTV ratio would then become $200k/$150k = 133%. Iā€™m guessing Milo might set the limit for the LTV around 80-100%. This would trigger the borrower to provide more collateral to bring the loan LTV back into balance or risk a default.

    Takeaway

    * Look, no one wants to be this guy:

    * The Bitcoin Mortgage is NOT a mass-market product. Itā€™s targeted at the lucky few who have bags of Bitcoin but donā€™t want to sell the underlying asset. It makes sense not to sell today if you believe the value will rise over the next 30 years.

    * But the devil will be in the details. Iā€™m keen to understand the terms and conditions of the mortgage. The lending risk is somewhat mitigated by the fact that the bank could repossess the house if the value of Bitcoin crashed.

    * This is an important first step. We still have a long way to go before uncollateralized crypto loans are possible and we are able to extend mortgages to people who donā€™t have access today. We will get there!

    NewsšŸ“°

    1. Coinbase is subject to class-action lawsuitšŸšØ

    * 3 individuals who purchased crypto through Coinbase have filed a class action lawsuit against the firm. They allege that Coinbase operated as an unregistered securities exchange because they claim that 79 of the tokens listed on the website are securities.

    * This lawsuit is not unexpected. The Chair of the SEC is thought to hold the view that many tokens/cryptocurrencies except Bitcoin, Ethereum, dollar-backed stablecoins are securities. If this is true, then Coinbase and other crypto exchanges would be required to register as securities exchanges and adhere to additional requirements.

    * I donā€™t think there is cause for extreme alarm. This is bigger than Coinbase. I hope this lawsuit nudges the industry closer to achieving clarity and supportive legislation.

    2. Crypto goes to Congress: Dems split šŸ’”šŸŖ“

    * Democratic party is split on crypto. But itā€™s not progressives vs centrists. The progressive wing is split. On one hand, Sen Elizabeth Warren is a vocal opponent concerned about consumer protections. On the other hand, folks like Rep Ritchie Torres (NY) are embracing the potential to reach the unbanked and cut lower the cost of services.

    * I liked this quote from Rep Torres:

    ā€œThe project of radically decentralizing the internet and finance strikes me as a profoundly progressive causeā€¦.You should never define any technology by its worst uses. ... Thereā€™s more to crypto than ransomware, just like thereā€™s more to money than money laundering.ā€

    * This week, Congress questioned leading crypto experts on the potential of Russia to use crypto to launder money and evade sanctions. TLDR: No evidence to suggest that this happening at scale. Hereā€™s the link if you are curious:

    3. 68% of US millionaires own crypto šŸ’øšŸ’°šŸ’²

    * Survey from Motley Fool finds that we are in good company!

    * Bitcoin is preferred. 60% of US millionaires own some Bitcoin while 50% of them own Ethereum. Turns out they arenā€™t immune to memecoins with 86% saying they had invested in the likes of dogecoin and Shiba-Inu

    * Looking ahead, 59% expect to allocate more of the portfolio to crypto over the next 5 years while 50% of those who donā€™t currently own any crypto plan to buy some within the next year.

    Public Service Announcement: Itā€™s less than a month before Tax Day. Commiserations to my crypto trading friends. Let me know how it goes and what tools helped you.

    O dabo

    Afo



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit afolabio.substack.com
  • Tomorrow (3/14) is Pi day! Yes, guilty as charged. Iā€™m a recovering math and science nerd. Pi day is an annual celebration of the mathematical constant ā€œpiā€ which relates to the circumference of a circle. Itā€™s also a great excuse to eat lots of pie.

    In honor of Pi day, I wanted to take a walk around the world and touch on a couple crypto relevant stories

    * Ukraine vs Russia: Crypto in war?

    * EU may ban proof of work - misguided?

    * Jambo: Can Play to earn take off in Africa?

    * Holy metaverse?

    1. Ukraine šŸ‡ŗšŸ‡¦ vs Russia šŸ‡·šŸ‡ŗ: Crypto in war?

    The good:

    * War is an ugly business. It brings out the worst of humanity. Yet even in those dark days, heroes emerge and necessity gives birth to innovation.

    * Over $100M of crypto has been donated to Ukraine from around the world. Without crypto, many of these donations would have taken 2+ business days to be processed and charged up to 6% fees. But with crypto, we have solutions that provide instant, free-to-near-free international payments.

    * Speed can be the difference between life and death. Imagine you lived in the US but your loved ones were under siege in Ukraine. They urgently requested money to flee. It could be heart wrenching having to wait 2+ business days. Mind you, if the request came on Friday, funds might not arrive till Tuesday. This could be unnecessary exposure.

    The ban:

    * Many Western governments and companies have put in place sanctions against Russians. This culminated in 7 leading Russian banks being cut-off from the SWIFT global payment network.

    * SWIFT is a global payment messaging system. It links over 11,000 banks across 200+ countries. The system does not transfer money rather its like an email system for banks. It conducts about 42 million messages every day. The ban on 7 Russian banks would cause inconvenience but I expect they might eventually develop workarounds over time. It remains to be seen how effective the sanctions are. Could crypto provide a workaround?

    The other side

    * In Nigeria, we say, when two elephants fight, the grass suffers. Deep wounds are being gored on both sides. Much of the US news coverage is focused on Ukrainian courage amidst Putinā€™s over-reach. I have also been thinking about regular Russian citizens - they did not choose this war.

    * The sanctions and exits of Western companies are dealing a heavy blow to the their economy. Global companies like McKinsey & Company, Visa, PWC, McDonaldā€™s are among the dozens which have ceased operations in the country. Many Russians now find themselves without a job at the exact moment their local currency (the ruble) has lost 40% of value against the US dollar and inflation rising.

    * Crypto could offer some solutions for them too. Russians could convert their life savings from rubles to US-dollar backed stablecoins or Bitcoin. Out-of-work Russians could consider Play-to-Earn games. Crypto payments could provide optionality in the event that sanctions.

    My heart goes out to Ukraine šŸ‡ŗšŸ‡¦ and all who have had their lives disrupted by the invasion.

    2. EU šŸ‡ŖšŸ‡ŗmay ban proof-of-work

    * The European Union (EU) has a legislative framework for governing digital currencies, itā€™s called Markets in Crypto Assets (MiCA). It contains a provision that could limit the use of proof-of-work cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum

    * Proof-of-work has been a lightning rod as it is an energy-intensive mechanism. Some environmentalists have decried coal-powered bitcoin mining in China as detrimental to the fight against climate change. It is in the in this vein that proof-of-work came under heavy scrutiny. However, I donā€™t think this premise is based on full understanding of the current state.

    * Bitcoin miners are highly mobile and incentivized to pursue the lowest energy source. Today, 39% of bitcoin mining is powered by renewable energy while only 13% of US power generation is renewable (EIA). Bitcoin mining can subsidize capital investments to build more renewable energy facilities.

    * The EU is right to consider opportunities to reduce carbon footprint. But it is odd to start with Bitcoin mining given its miniscule carbon footprint compared to other related activities like the traditional banking system (650x), gold mining (90x), and paper currency printing (11x). Furthermore, a 1% reduction in carbon emissions from global aviation sector would be 5x larger than total carbon emissions associated with Bitcoin mining. Shouldnā€™t we focus on that?

    3. Jambo: Play to earn in AfricašŸ’°

    * Last year, I shared the story of how Play-to-earn NFT games were providing thousands of Filipinos a means of livelihood. Africa has many of the same strong fundamentals: 60% of the population is below 24 years old and almost 50% of university graduates in Africa are unemployed.

    * James Zhang, a 3rd-generation Chinese-Congolese, founded Jambo in Kinshasa to capitalize on the same trends in Africa. Jamboā€™s goal is to become the Web 3.0 super app for Africa. They have already reached 12,000 students across 14 countries (Morocco, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Equatorial Guinea, Kenya, Congo, Uganda, Rwanda, DR Congo, Tanzania, Zambia, Namibia, Madagascar and South Africa).

    * The students go through a 10-weeek program to explore opportunities in play-to-earn gaming and decentralized finance (DeFi). Jambo also takes on some of the students to become local ambassadors. Jambo provides scholarships which enables students to earn money. In some cases, students are making 2x what their salary might be.

    * Jambo recently raised $7.5M from a group of investors including Coinbase Ventures, Alameda Research and other notable crypto investors. The goal is to achieve 1M downloads by the end of year.

    * Too often, US VCs looking to invest in Africa focus in on Nigeria, South Africa and Kenya. It makes sense these are some of the most mature and dynamic hubs on the continent. However, it belies the difference and opportunities in the other 51 countries in Africa. Iā€™ve been impressed by Jamboā€™s strategy of quickly getting boots on the ground in a a variety of countries.

    4. Holy Metaverse ā›Ŗļøāœļø

    * This week, I learned that there is a VR Church in the metaverse! They host Sunday services, weekly groups, and offer volunteer opportunitiesā€¦100% in the metaverse. The clincher is that it was established in 2017!

    * One of the great hopes of the metaverse is to improve access. This has proved true in the VR Church. One of the leaders shared how she had been diagnosed with a neuro-muscular condition which effectively left her homebound since 2010. VR Church has given her an avenue to be actively engaged in a community.

    * Just when I was thinking this was pretty fringe stuff, today my sister and brother-in-law shared that their church was planning to run part of their youth summer program in the metaverse.

    * Church attendance in the US has declined in recent decades. It makes sense to leverage technology to reach the next generation. However, VR Church proves that there is staying power. It delivers on creating a more accessible and global experience. What a great time to be alive.

    I hope you have a wonderful Pi Day and week ahead.

    O dabo

    Afo



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit afolabio.substack.com
  • Whatā€™s your favorite animal? For a long time I really didnā€™t have one. When asked, Iā€™d sometimes pick a random African animal or something philosophical to try and impress whoever I was with. Ugh. Thankfully Iā€™ve passed that stage. Lately, Iā€™ve been watching squirrels. I see them everywhere from our backyard to the parks when Iā€™m out cycling. Beyond their cute fluffy tails, squirrels just always seem happy, energetic and playful. They seemingly bound from tree to tree without losing enthusiasm. Have you ever seen a sad or moody squirrel šŸæ ?

    Crypto prices crashed this week. How did you fare? I hope you channeled your inner squirrel. Iā€™ve been zen. My approach is to devise a strategy then automate execution over the long-term. If prices continue to slide then there might be some very attractive opportunities. Are you ready? What projects are on your shopping list? Remember, Uncle Warren Buffett said ā€œbe fearful when others are greedy and be greedy when others are fearfulā€.

    Crypto shopping listšŸ›’

    One of my goals this year is to significantly expand my crypto portfolio beyond my bitcoin and ethereum base. I missed out on a TON of upside last year by playing it very safe and not executing on recommendations from my friends. If the crypto price slide extends there might be opportunities to pick up some coins at decent entry points.

    I recently finished reading ā€œThe Psychology of Moneyā€ by Morgan Housel. It argues that we all make rationale financial decisions based on our background. The challenge is that we all have very different backgrounds, personalities and aspirations. For me, the most important thing is peace. A super aggressive strategy might give me amazing returns but it might cost me my sleep at night. Thatā€™s not a cost I'm willing to pay.

    Additionally, we often only think about returns that we could have made but we discount the losses we could have incurred. Social media is a highlight reel. Most people share their triumphs but are mute on losses. So I say this to say, donā€™t cry over spilled milk. Figure out what works for you then get it done. As we say in Nigeria, ā€œpaddle your own canoeā€.

    Disclaimers:

    * I donā€™t offer any financial advice. Iā€™m just a guy with a laptop trying to figure this thing out. Please do your own research.

    * My crypto shopping list is a work in progress. Itā€™s subject to change at any time. Iā€™m very much still learning. Iā€™m also not sharing my full list of projects that Iā€™m curious about - that might deserve itā€™s own edition or two lol.

    Please share your ideas with me too!

    Crypto shopping list

    I already have some of these but I want MORE

    * Solana (SOL) - low transaction cost, seen as an ethereum challenger

    * Chainlink (LINK) - bringing real-world data on-chain

    * Avalanche (AVAX) - fast smart contracts

    * Ecomi (OMI) - NFT play; itā€™s the token for Veve which has major partnerships

    * Decentraland (MANA) - leading metaverse project

    NFT updatešŸ“ˆ

    Last week, I shared my excitement about the new Ancient Empires NFT collection. The collection celebrates the history of ancient African and Latin American civilizations by creating art NFTs which could appeal to a broader population. Well I did it! I made an impulse buy. (Not sure we should celebrate that but this is where we areā€¦hahaha).

    I chose this piece because of the cultural significance of the mask the man is wearing in the picture. Masks are a key part of the cultural heritage of the Yoruba and Benin people. (Context - Iā€™m Yoruba; the Yoruba and Benin empires are in modern-day Nigeria but they have ancient linkages and a tremendous art heritage. Unfortunately, many culturally significant pieces were destroyed when our palaces were raided during wars with the Portuguese and British armies. Many of the surviving pieces were looted and put on display in museums across global art capitals from London to New York and elsewhere.

    I named my NFT ā€œOranmiyanā€ after a prince of the Yoruba and Benin empires. Over 800 years after his death, his descendants still sit on the throne in Benin. My dude looks like a fierce warrior. Maybe I should hit the gym more so my arms match hisā€¦

    NEWS šŸ“°

    1.Federal Reserve finally published itā€™s paper on CBDCs šŸ’ø

    * The US Federal Reserve FINALLY published itā€™s long waited paper on Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs). The paper lays out pros and cons of CBDCs. It does NOT make a recommendation. Rather, the Fed is seeking input from the public and will only act if Congress tells it to do so.

    * I read the paper. I am not convinced 2 of the pros listed by the Fed are real.

    * Improve cross-border payments: The average outgoing international payment from the US has a 5% fee. Introducing a CBDC isnā€™t magically going to solve this. There will need to be conversions among various CBDCs. I am not convinced this system would outperform the existing crypto technology today ex lightning network.

    * Improve financial inclusion: 5% of the US is not banked and another 20% are significantly underbanked ex they routinely depend on high cost, inefficient services like pay day loans, etc. People say crypto and CBDCs will improve financial inclusion but they routinely fail to demonstrate how. This frustrates me. Illiteracy, lack of trust, and low income are leading drivers for exclusion. These are not addressed by a CBDC. Furthermore, during the pandemic CBDC advocates pointed out how the government payment of stimulus funds would have been more efficient if we had CBDCs and each US person held an account with the Federal Reserve. Well, the Federal Reserve Act specifically says the central bank canā€™t bank retail customers. Maybe Iā€™m missing something.

    * That said, I definitely agree that it is in the US strategic national interest for the dollar to continue being the worldā€™s reserve currency. Other countries want the influence it provides. The dollar could become vulnerable if other countries (cough China) provides a superior technology. The map below shows 9 countries (including Nigeria) have launched CBDCs with 14 countries (including China) running pilot tests and 16 countries (including Russia) have them in development. The US needs to move here.

    2. Twitter verifying NFTs šŸŖž

    * Crypto Twittersphere has been awash with NFTs as profile pictures. Some say itā€™s the ultimate status symbol to indicate you are part of the community. But whatā€™s stopping posers who donā€™t actually own NFTs from uploading a picture of someone elseā€™s NFT and using that as their profile picture. Well nothing.

    * Until now! Twitter is linking your digital asset wallets to your profile. Thus, youā€™d only be able to upload NFTs you own as your profile picture. I guess if you do this thereā€™ll be some kind of check mark to indicate itā€™s been verified.

    * This is an important move for 2 reasons. First, Twitter is one of the first social media platforms to integrate NFTs. Others will follow. Secondly, it marks a departure from Jack Dorseyā€™s Bitcoin-only philosophy as NFTs are primarily on Ethereum, Solana etc. Iā€™m expecting to hear more from Twitter.

    3. a16z makes first investment in Africa šŸ•¹

    * a16z, the famed crypto, FinTech and consumer tech VC firm has made itā€™s first investment in an African startup, Carry1st. a16z was an early investor in Facebook, Coinbase and many other household names.

    * This investment stands out because itā€™s a gaming company headquartered in South Africa. Of course, there will be a crypto/web3.0 angle to this. Iā€™ve been vocal about how bullish I am on gaming in Africa. I guess Iā€™m in good company lol.

    * Carry1st already accepts various cryptocurrencies as payments. They are looking to expand that. Letā€™s stay tuned.

    Thatā€™s all folks! Remember, be a squirrel šŸæ

    O dabo

    Afolabi



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit afolabio.substack.com
  • Whatā€™s your favorite animal? For a long time I really didnā€™t have one. When asked, Iā€™d sometimes pick a random African animal or something philosophical to try and impress whoever I was with. Ugh. Thankfully Iā€™ve passed that stage. Lately, Iā€™ve been watching squirrels. I see them everywhere from our backyard to the parks when Iā€™m out cycling. Beyond their cute fluffy tails, squirrels just always seem happy, energetic and playful. They seemingly bound from tree to tree without losing enthusiasm. Have you ever seen a sad or moody squirrel šŸæ ?

    Crypto prices crashed this week. How did you fare? I hope you channeled your inner squirrel. Iā€™ve been zen. My approach is to devise a strategy then automate execution over the long-term. If prices continue to slide then there might be some very attractive opportunities. Are you ready? What projects are on your shopping list? Remember, Uncle Warren Buffett said ā€œbe fearful when others are greedy and be greedy when others are fearfulā€.

    Crypto shopping listšŸ›’

    One of my goals this year is to significantly expand my crypto portfolio beyond my bitcoin and ethereum base. I missed out on a TON of upside last year by playing it very safe and not executing on recommendations from my friends. If the crypto price slide extends there might be opportunities to pick up some coins at decent entry points.

    I recently finished reading ā€œThe Psychology of Moneyā€ by Morgan Housel. It argues that we all make rationale financial decisions based on our background. The challenge is that we all have very different backgrounds, personalities and aspirations. For me, the most important thing is peace. A super aggressive strategy might give me amazing returns but it might cost me my sleep at night. Thatā€™s not a cost I'm willing to pay.

    Additionally, we often only think about returns that we could have made but we discount the losses we could have incurred. Social media is a highlight reel. Most people share their triumphs but are mute on losses. So I say this to say, donā€™t cry over spilled milk. Figure out what works for you then get it done. As we say in Nigeria, ā€œpaddle your own canoeā€.

    Disclaimers:

    * I donā€™t offer any financial advice. Iā€™m just a guy with a laptop trying to figure this thing out. Please do your own research.

    * My crypto shopping list is a work in progress. Itā€™s subject to change at any time. Iā€™m very much still learning. Iā€™m also not sharing my full list of projects that Iā€™m curious about - that might deserve itā€™s own edition or two lol.

    Please share your ideas with me too!

    Crypto shopping list

    I already have some of these but I want MORE

    * Solana (SOL) - low transaction cost, seen as an ethereum challenger

    * Chainlink (LINK) - bringing real-world data on-chain

    * Avalanche (AVAX) - fast smart contracts

    * Ecomi (OMI) - NFT play; itā€™s the token for Veve which has major partnerships

    * Decentraland (MANA) - leading metaverse project

    NFT updatešŸ“ˆ

    Last week, I shared my excitement about the new Ancient Empires NFT collection. The collection celebrates the history of ancient African and Latin American civilizations by creating art NFTs which could appeal to a broader population. Well I did it! I made an impulse buy. (Not sure we should celebrate that but this is where we areā€¦hahaha).

    I chose this piece because of the cultural significance of the mask the man is wearing in the picture. Masks are a key part of the cultural heritage of the Yoruba and Benin people. (Context - Iā€™m Yoruba; the Yoruba and Benin empires are in modern-day Nigeria but they have ancient linkages and a tremendous art heritage. Unfortunately, many culturally significant pieces were destroyed when our palaces were raided during wars with the Portuguese and British armies. Many of the surviving pieces were looted and put on display in museums across global art capitals from London to New York and elsewhere.

    I named my NFT ā€œOranmiyanā€ after a prince of the Yoruba and Benin empires. Over 800 years after his death, his descendants still sit on the throne in Benin. My dude looks like a fierce warrior. Maybe I should hit the gym more so my arms match hisā€¦

    NEWS šŸ“°

    1.Federal Reserve finally published itā€™s paper on CBDCs šŸ’ø

    * The US Federal Reserve FINALLY published itā€™s long waited paper on Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs). The paper lays out pros and cons of CBDCs. It does NOT make a recommendation. Rather, the Fed is seeking input from the public and will only act if Congress tells it to do so.

    * I read the paper. I am not convinced 2 of the pros listed by the Fed are real.

    * Improve cross-border payments: The average outgoing international payment from the US has a 5% fee. Introducing a CBDC isnā€™t magically going to solve this. There will need to be conversions among various CBDCs. I am not convinced this system would outperform the existing crypto technology today ex lightning network.

    * Improve financial inclusion: 5% of the US is not banked and another 20% are significantly underbanked ex they routinely depend on high cost, inefficient services like pay day loans, etc. People say crypto and CBDCs will improve financial inclusion but they routinely fail to demonstrate how. This frustrates me. Illiteracy, lack of trust, and low income are leading drivers for exclusion. These are not addressed by a CBDC. Furthermore, during the pandemic CBDC advocates pointed out how the government payment of stimulus funds would have been more efficient if we had CBDCs and each US person held an account with the Federal Reserve. Well, the Federal Reserve Act specifically says the central bank canā€™t bank retail customers. Maybe Iā€™m missing something.

    * That said, I definitely agree that it is in the US strategic national interest for the dollar to continue being the worldā€™s reserve currency. Other countries want the influence it provides. The dollar could become vulnerable if other countries (cough China) provides a superior technology. The map below shows 9 countries (including Nigeria) have launched CBDCs with 14 countries (including China) running pilot tests and 16 countries (including Russia) have them in development. The US needs to move here.

    2. Twitter verifying NFTs šŸŖž

    * Crypto Twittersphere has been awash with NFTs as profile pictures. Some say itā€™s the ultimate status symbol to indicate you are part of the community. But whatā€™s stopping posers who donā€™t actually own NFTs from uploading a picture of someone elseā€™s NFT and using that as their profile picture. Well nothing.

    * Until now! Twitter is linking your digital asset wallets to your profile. Thus, youā€™d only be able to upload NFTs you own as your profile picture. I guess if you do this thereā€™ll be some kind of check mark to indicate itā€™s been verified.

    * This is an important move for 2 reasons. First, Twitter is one of the first social media platforms to integrate NFTs. Others will follow. Secondly, it marks a departure from Jack Dorseyā€™s Bitcoin-only philosophy as NFTs are primarily on Ethereum, Solana etc. Iā€™m expecting to hear more from Twitter.

    3. a16z makes first investment in Africa šŸ•¹

    * a16z, the famed crypto, FinTech and consumer tech VC firm has made itā€™s first investment in an African startup, Carry1st. a16z was an early investor in Facebook, Coinbase and many other household names.

    * This investment stands out because itā€™s a gaming company headquartered in South Africa. Of course, there will be a crypto/web3.0 angle to this. Iā€™ve been vocal about how bullish I am on gaming in Africa. I guess Iā€™m in good company lol.

    * Carry1st already accepts various cryptocurrencies as payments. They are looking to expand that. Letā€™s stay tuned.

    Thatā€™s all folks! Remember, be a squirrel šŸæ

    O dabo

    Afolabi



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit afolabio.substack.com
  • Happy New Year! E ku odun! Bonne annĆ©e! Feliz ano nuevo!

    I started writing this edition 2 weeks ago but then I became unwell. Thankfully, I am feeling much better now. I hope 2022 brings more joy, growth and good health. Please stay safe out there.

    I spy a metaversešŸ•µļø

    Steve Jobs unveiled the first iPhone šŸ“± 15 years ago. Back then, Steve Ballmer, CEO of Microsoft famously laughed at the most expensive phone in the world ($500). Ballmer said the iPhone wouldnā€™t take off with business customers because it didnā€™t have a keyboard. The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, USA Today, The Guardian and even an iPod engineer joined in bashing the iPhoneā€™s prospects. Flash forward today, over 2 billion iPhones have been sold. Recently, Apple became the first company to reach a $3 trillion valuation.

    Technology adoption is difficult to predict. Experts are often wrong. We are wired to reach for negative news and naysayers. But then technology takes off much faster than expected in ways that couldnā€™t have been imagined.

    This brings me to the metaverse.

    Metaverse - the internet in 3D

    The metaverse has featured in sci-fi novels since the 1970s but it surged to the popular lexicon when Facebook rebranded itself Meta. But this is not just a PR stunt. Mark Zuckerberg announced that Meta would be investing billions of dollars and hiring 10,000 people to build Facebookā€™s metaverse solutions.

    Metaverse: dive in!

    Yesterday, my wife and I were chatting about the metaverse. She described it as ā€œthe internet in 3Dā€. I donā€™t know if this is an original thought but I like the sound of it. Itā€™s certainly easier than saying ā€œThe metaverse refers to a virtual space that is shared by different worlds, created by the combination of augmented reality, virtually-enhanced physical reality, and the Internet.ā€

    Experience is the best teacher. So I took the plunge and went to 2 New Year Eve parties in Decentralandā€™s metaverse platform. Hereā€™s a short clip.

    Here are my initial thoughts:

    Pros

    + Self expression: It was cool designing my own avatar and navigating the virtual world. You could completely reinvent yourself. I can see why fashion brands are heading over to the metaverse. Some people want to dress to impress in real life AND metaverse.

    + Activity šŸ: I toured an NFT museum, drove a car on a race track, climbed to the top of a couple tall buildings to survey the view and danced with a bunch of strangers. There is a ton of potential for activities. It would be cool to go to a theme park in the metaverse. But Iā€™m gonna need to invest in some hardware so I can have an immersive experience.

    + New world: I started seeing the potential for new ways of gathering. My siblings are spread out between San Diego and London. We have monthly marathon Zoom calls to catch up. Perhaps one day we will family have reunions in a virtual replica of my parents house in Lagos, Nigeria.

    Cons

    + Over hyped: I felt a bit let down. Thereā€™s been so much hype about the metaverse. I wanted to be blown away. I wasnā€™t. Iā€™m also admittedly new to the scene, so maybe thereā€™s a bit of user error. The the fact that an 8-year old played a masterpiece like Symphony No. 40 poorly does not make Mozart any less of a genius. So, Iā€™m definitely going to spend more time exploring the metaverse. Let me know any tips you might have.

    +No connections: How do you make friends in the metaverse? I was strolling around by myself. I danced in groups with strangers but I didnā€™t make a single connection. Maybe it wasnā€™t time and place. Or maybe Iā€™m missing something. I also found a tracker to count number of people in Decentraland. There were 2,331 people logged in Decentraland at the time of writing. Thatā€™s really not a lot.

    +Glitches: The user experience was a bit glitchy. It froze a couple times. I had some challenges toggling between different views. The experience reminded me how early we are. Most metaverse platforms are not even accessible on cellphones yet.

    Takeaway: I donā€™t think we are on the cusp of mass metaverse adoptionā€¦thatā€™s gonna take years. I do think the technology is part of our future but the user experience needs to improve, we need mobile phone access, maybe even more hardware ex headsets. Iā€™d love to see the product roadmap. I am going to explore other metaverse platforms. I am also really curious to see what Meta has cooking. Facebook cracked the code on social media, can Meta do the same for the metaverse?

    Early = Opportunity?

    So whatā€™s a guy to do if you spot an opportunity that isnā€™t quite ready for primetime? You invest! Iā€™m clearly not alone here. But how should one invest? This really depends on your risk tolerance, conviction and goals. I donā€™t offer any financial advice, please do your own research. Iā€™m simply sharing my current thoughts. What are yours?

    Future fund šŸ“ˆ

    My goal is to build an investment position around the metaverse theme. Iā€™m looking to hold for 5+ years during which I hope it offers handsome returns šŸ“ˆ. I will achieve this by dollar cost averaging (small weekly purchases) and making more significant opportunistic investments.

    * Equities šŸŸ¦

    For as much I talk about crypto, stocks are still the foundation of my investment strategy. I primarily buy ETFs (basket of stocks) instead of shares of individual companies. Roundhill Ball launched a metaverse ETF in 2021. Itā€™s made up of established tech companies investing in this space. NVIDIA (gaming chips), Meta (social media), Roblox (gaming), Microsoft (diversified tech), make up 30% of the holdings. Apple, Amazon and Snap are also part of the crew. It feels like like a safe tech bet unlikely to cause heartburn. Just watch the 0.75% fees. I expect more metaverse focused ETFs to be launched this year.

    * Crypto šŸŸ§

    When Facebook made their fateful announcement, it sent the price of metaverse related cryptos soaring sky high. For reference, decentralized metaverse platforms like Decentraland have their own cryptocurrencies. You need them to buy land, products and services. Decentraland has MANA, Sandbox has the Sand token and Axie Infinity has Axies. I hold some MANA and AXIE.

    I see two categories of metaverse cryptos: established vs newbie. The established cryptos include more well known projects like Decentraland, Sandbox, Axie Infinity which have attracted some following. These are less risky with higher chance of moderate returns. The newbie cryptos like Solice are associated with untested projects that were more recently launched. They are more risky with a higher chance of outsize returns. You have to do research to find and vet these projects.

    * Land šŸŸ„

    Someone spent $450k to buy land next to Snoop Doggā€™s virtual house. A part of me is recoiling from sticker shock at some of the prices Iā€™ve seen. Not all land is created equally. I also donā€™t feel sufficiently knowledgeable to go ahead with this investment yet. In the ideal scenario, Iā€™d like to own land across a couple platforms - this reduces my exposure if I donā€™t pick a winner. Letā€™s see.

    NewsšŸ—ž

    1. Walmart goes crypto, metaverse

    The stampede of brick-and-mortar businesses diving into the metaverse just got louder. Walmart, Americaā€™s largest retailer, is reportedly launching a cryptocurrency, a collection of NFTs and a metaverse project.

    I found a tweet which reportedly shows how Walmart envisions metaverse shopping:

    I appreciate that they are aiming to keep up with evolving technology. It reminds me of the early days of the internet when we initially copied and pasted our analog activities onto the web but over time internet native activities and habits emerged. We are still early.

    2. Arkansas offering $10k in bitcoin

    It looks like the State of Arkansas has been inspired by itā€™s favorite daughter (Walmart). Arkansas is now offering remote tech workers $10,000 in bitcoin if you relocate there. The Walton family have also invested and elevated the arts and parks near their headquarters. A couple of my friends have vacationed in Arkansas and came back with great tales of fun and adventure across lakes, hikes and parks. So far, over 35,000 people have already applied.

    3. Ancient Warriors Empire NFT

    Ancient Warriors is a new NFT collection of 4,444 warriors hailing from some of the greatest African and Latin American empires in history. The decentralized empire represents the might of the Aztecs, Zulus, Inkas, and Benin Kingdoms.

    The underlying goal of the project is to help onboard people of African and Latin American descent into Web 3.0 by celebrating their cultural history. I am seriously thinking about getting one of these. This project goes live on Monday Jan 17. Each NFT is expected to sell for 0.5 ETH and minting fee is 0.05 ETH.

    4. Rio de Janiero goes crypto

    Mayor of Rio de Janiero kicked off the year by announcing the Brazilian city would be investing 1% of its treasury in crypto. This move is not in isolation. City government is looking into receiving tax payments in bitcoin and offering discounts to citizens who do so. The mayor wants to position Rio as a leading center for crypto.

    5. Banks stablecoin

    Last year, the Presidentā€™s Working Group on Financial Markets issued a report on stablecoins wherein they recommended Congress require stablecoin issuers to be depository insured companies. None of the leading stablecoins might this qualification. Now a consortium of US banks are launching a stablecoin. This stablecoin would be programmed for use in wallets which have been KYC-ed. I think this is an exciting development. However, the FDIC has not yet confirmed whether these bank-issued stablecoins would be insured up to $250k like fiat is. I have been thinking about the DeFi mullet (FinTech on the front and DeFi on the back). This could be a significant enabler. Stay tuned!

    Thatā€™s all folks! I hope you have a wonderful week.

    O dabo

    Afolabi



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit afolabio.substack.com
  • My wife and I typically do a quick getaway at the end of the year. Itā€™s nice to ring in the new year in a new city but we also invest time to review our goals and set new ones. We hit all the big ones: relationship, fitness, financial goals and more.

    This year, crypto has become a bigger share of our portfolio. We ramped up our investments and fortunately those investments have done well in the crypto bull run. We continue to think through how best to play in the space.

    Six months ago, my brother-in-law and I started experimenting with bitcoin mining. I shared about it in April. Today, we will dive into the ROI of our bitcoin mining experiment and then address exciting developments in the cryptoverse.

    REVIEW: Bitcoin mining with CompassšŸš€šŸš€šŸš€

    TLDR: We earned 60% ROI on bitcoin mining versus 29% if we just bought bitcoin

    Background

    Compass Mining offers a white glove service for regular folks looking to get into bitcoin mining. We purchased a miner (high powered computer) and had it installed at a facility in Nebraska. It took about a month for the miner to be delivered from China. We chose to host the machine at an industrial site instead of our home because they have access to much lower electricity rates.

    We recently sold the miner to upgrade to a more powerful model. Felt like a good time to assess if the ROI of mining bitcoin was better than buying and holding bitcoin.

    Numbers

    Case A: Bitcoin mining šŸ’»

    Costs: The miner cost $9,800 upfront and we paid $150 a month in hosting fees. Overall, it cost us $10,700 over the 6 months the miner was in operation.

    Revenue: We sold the miner for $12,469. Yes, you read that right. We sold the miner for more money than we bought it. We benefitted from the tight market for machines. In addition, the miner produced 0.1 bitcoin ($4,697 at todayā€™s price).

    ROI: We achieved a 60% return on investment.

    Case B: Buy and holdšŸ“ˆ

    Costs: If we did not buy a miner, we would have invested $9,800 in bitcoin on June 1st. This would have yielded 0.26 Bitcoin (based on $37,340 on June 1).

    Revenue: The bitcoin would have earned about $287 interest in a BlockFi account. More importantly, thereā€™s been significant appreciation since June. The initial investment in 0.26 bitcoin would now be valued at $12,327 (based on bitcoin price of $46,970 today).

    ROI: We would have achieved a 29% return on investment.

    TakeawaysšŸ“Š

    Bitcoin mining could outperform buying and holding the bitcoin. However, the economics would look different if we sold the miner for less than we bought it. I imagine the price of miners will drop during the crypto market. Timing is key.

    The 60% ROI is good but it pales in comparison to some other opportunities we could have pursued. During that time period, Solana was +460% and Chainlink was +280%. Bitcoin mining could be a part of a comprehensive crypto strategy. But please do your own research. I am not a financial adviser, just sharing my experience.

    NEWS šŸ—ž

    1. Winter is coming: Are you in it to win it?

    * 2021 has been a standout year for crypto. Millions of new investors have dived into the space. Millions of people have found utility and joy through the products and services enabled by blockchain technology. But it is NOT always going to be like this.

    * Crypto winter is coming. I donā€™t know when it will be or how long it will last but history tells us to expect a deep, sustained price crash for a couple years. The good news is that when winter is over, the crypto summer bull market will take us to new heights.

    * Crypto OGs like the winter because the fakers get out and the OGs double-down. Coinbase used the last crypto winter to buy up companies that have helped cement their dominant position. As an individual, you should have a strategy for the crypto winter. Remember, Warren Buffett said ā€œbe fearful when others are greedy, and greedy when others are fearful.ā€ Are you in it to win it?

    2. Crypto for Christmas?

    * CashApp and Robinhood have rolled out the capability to send crypto gifts just in time for the holidays.

    * I am excited about this because both of these companies have a sizable user base

    * This could be a great gift for that person who has everything. We have friends who have been gifting bitcoin to all the children in their life.

    3. Metaverse Magna: Play to earn in Africa

    * I am very bullish about the potential of play to earn in Africa. This is because 60% of Africans are under 25yo, internet penetration is greater than 60% in key countries, and unemployment has worsened.

    * Metaverse Magna was launched this week. It is the first and largest African crypto gaming DAO with a scholarship program. In Asia, gamers have earned up to $1000 a month playing crypto games but the start-up costs can be high ($1200 for Axie Infinity).

    * Metaverse Magna has a scholarship program with over 160 gamers using rented out Axies and splitting the earnings. With Africaā€™s population set to grow to 1.7 billion by 2030 (World Bank), I am excited for play-to-earn games to gain a foothold on the continent.

    4. Jack Dorsey names Bitcoin Trust board

    * Jack Dorsey and Jay Z previously announced they would donate 500 bitcoin to set up ā‚ætrust, an endowment to fund bitcoin development with a starting focus on teams based in Africa and India.

    * This week, they announced 4 board members out of 7,000 applicants. The board will be made up of 1 South African and 3 Nigerians. Iā€™m excited to see Nigeria (over?) represented. More excited to see what the trust will accomplish.

    5. Everyone has an NFT, metaverse play

    * It feels like everyday another major company announces a play in NFT and/or the metaverse. This brings me back to the point about the fakers getting out of the space during the crypto winter.

    * This week, Nike bought a company that makes sneakers for the metaverse

    * Companies are opening up virtual offices in the metaverse for employees to return to work. Maybe Bill Gates was up to something, I remain a lil skeptical in the short-term.

    * Hereā€™s a roundup of what companiesā€™ said about the metaverse during their earnings call

    Thatā€™s all folks! I hope you have a merry Christmas!

    O dabo

    Afo



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit afolabio.substack.com
  • Hey,

    In recent months, lots of high profile personalities have announced plans to get paid in crypto. The Mayors of New York and Miami joined athletes like Aaron Rodgers and Odell Beckham; and artists like 50 Cent and Mel B to get partially or fully paid in crypto. Coinbase recently partnered with UnitedMasters to let musicians receive their royalties in crypto. But is this just a gimmick for the rich? What are regular Joe and Jane doing? Iā€™m conducting a survey to understand attitudes towards getting paid in crypto. It took me less than 1 minute to it fill out. Please let your voice be heard here! Itā€™s anonymous. Iā€™ll share the results with you.

    Besides getting paid in crypto, one could also receive crypto rewards for everyday purchases. Iā€™ve been using the Fold card to earn bitcoin rewards for a couple months. Iā€™ll share some of my thoughts belowā€¦.and of course Iā€™ll touch on some of the recent news developments in crypto: such as Chainlink, metaverse, Novi and regulations. Letā€™s go!

    Fold review: Bitcoin rewards card šŸ’³

    Why Fold?

    When we got married, we paid for our honeymoon and flights to Hawaii with credit card loyalty points. We had an amazing time! But it was even sweeter knowing that we did not use cash for our luxury getaway. The Fold card presents the same allure. The opportunity to build a bitcoin stash without changing behavior was too good to pass up.

    How did it go?

    Fold started out enabling users to earn rewards by buying gift cards. Next, they graduated to offering a debit card with bitcoin buy back on all purchases.

    Phase 1: Gift cards

    I earned 1% bitcoin rewards when I bought Amazon gift cards using Fold. I started buying $100 gift cards and pre-loading my Amazon account. I would spend cash from the gift card on my protein powder or a gift. Iā€™m not a huge shopper but it felt pretty easy to score some free bitcoin.

    Bitcoin rewards: $100 Amazon gift card x 1% = $1 rewards = 0.00002 BTC rewards (assuming 1BTC = $50,000, 1% rewards for using a credit card)

    Yeah, the rewards are NOT huge. But I suppose they could add up if you shop a lot. Fold also has gift cards with varying bitcoin rewards from a variety of retailers like Chipotle, Banana Republic and Southwest Airlines. But you have to read the fine print - rewards might be capped at 1% if you are purchasing the gift card with a debit/credit card. Either way, might as well get free from bitcoin while you get your holiday shopping done.

    Additionally, Fold has an app where you can spin the wheel and potentially turbocharge your rewards or when 1 whole bitcoin! I havenā€™t won a bitcoin yet but Iā€™ll continue spinning lol.

    Phase 2: Debit card

    Earlier this year, Fold launched a debit card. I got the basic one. I figured I could earn more bitcoin from everyday transactions like going to a local coffee shop or my gym membership.

    Unfortunately, the card has been a disappointment. Yes, I routinely use it at my local coffee shop and my barber but itā€™s NOT accepted everywhere. Much to my annoyance, I have been unable to directly pay my gym membership, powerlifting coach or CashApp friends with my Fold card. I have had to develop workaround solutions to pay my coach like PayPal but PayPal charges a ~3% fee on the Fold card which is greater than the bitcoin rewards cash back. I imagine these are growing pains and will eventually be fixed. Right now, itā€™s incredibly annoying to have a transaction declined or be forced to pay higher fees.

    Verdict

    I still use my Fold card for a couple transactions every month. So far, Iā€™ve racked up over $40 worth of bitcoin rewards. Nothing to get to terribly excited about. That said, I have seen folks on Twitter who have won 1 bitcoin from spinning the wheel in the Fold app. Iā€™ve also seen people stack serious sats by putting most of their regular expenses like rent, groceries and airline tickets on their Fold card. To be honest, I could ratchet it up a notch or three. Exhibit A:

    My biggest recommendation to Fold is to address the pain points around payment acceptance and fees ex PayPal.

    Whatā€™s been your experience?

    NEWS

    1. Crypto goes to CongressšŸ‘©ā€āš–ļø

    * CEOs of 6 crypto companies testified in front of the US House Committee on Financial Services and received encouragement from both Democrats and Republican representatives.

    * The crypto executives provided some context on the potential and opportunities of cryptocurrencies and blockchain solutions to lower costs and drive greater inclusion. They also pleaded for more well thought out regulation to support the industryā€™s growth.

    * This tone marked a departure from several years ago. Hopefully, there will be more in the future. I would like bipartisan support for crypto.

    2. ChainLink: Attracting top talent šŸ“ˆ

    * ChainLink connects real world data to on-chain smart contracts. So for example, a farmer in Kansas could get crop insurance with payouts triggered by weather events ex tornado. All of this could be executed with code NOT people enabled by ChainLink

    * The 4-year old company has secured partnerships with a number of major players include AWS, Google, Oracle etc. Now, ChainLink Labs is attracting more big name talent: (1) Eric Schmidt, former CEO of Google, joined ChainLink as a strategic advisor (2) Mike Derezin, former VP of LinkedIn, joined ChainLink as COO.

    * I think ChainLink is well positioned to help bring the promise of smart contracts alive for everyday use cases. Itā€™s definitely on my radar.

    3. WhatsApp testing stablecoin payments in the US šŸ’¬āš”ļø

    * This is big. WhatsApp has over 2 billion monthly active users worldwide.

    * Most of my family - scattered across Africa, Europe and North America - are daily users of WhatsApp. They may not understand crypto or stablecoins but they will eagerly use WhatsApp Pay. And more. I can see payments to merchants, lending, and so on.

    * The question is, can Novi deliver on this promise? Last week, David Marcus, the head of Novi, announced he was leaving. Novi has suffered a string of high profile departures. From the outside looking in, it feels like a shadow of itā€™s former self.

    4. Bill Gatesā€™ bullish on metaverse šŸš€

    * ā€œPeople overestimate what can be done in one year, and underestimate what can be done in tenā€œ.

    * That said, I think Bill Gates is wrong here. But I also donā€™t know if he literally meant that MOST office meetings will switch over to the metaverse. I wonder if he was trying to make a clear statement: the metaverse is here to stay and is coming for Main Street USA. Now thatā€™s a message I could get behind.

    5. Messari 2022 crypto thesesšŸ¤Æ

    * Ryan Selkis, the founder of Messari - a leading crypto research firm - has dropped 165-page tome on crypto developments for 2022 for FREE. It covers everything from bitcoin to NFT, metaverse to solana and MORE!

    * If you are new to crypto or want to learn more then I highly recommend you download it. Iā€™m gradually consuming the content. Ryan is able to borrow thoughts from across cryptosphere. Itā€™s incredible that he shares it for free.

    * Let me know what you agree or disagree with

    (Bugsā€™s Bunny accent) Thatā€™s all folks!

    I hope you have a terrific week. May the winds ever blow in your favor.

    O dabo,

    Afo



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit afolabio.substack.com
  • Hey friends,

    About a year ago, I started publishing this newsletter as a forcing mechanism to document my learning, clarify my thinking and keep up with crypto news. I decided to share in the event that someone else might find it useful. Thank you for coming on this journey with me. #wagmi! (Crypto babble for ā€œWeā€™re all gonna make it!ā€)

    Well fam, Iā€™ve got some exciting news to share: I did it! I took the plunge. This week will be my first working in crypto full-time.

    New beginnings šŸš€

    I came across a conversation between a McKinsey senior partner and executives at Cross River, a technology-forward bank. I was instantly struck by Gilles Gadesā€™ (CEO) and Adam Gollerā€™s (Head of FinTech banking) energy, innovation, and openness to crypto. So I reached out to the team. This led to a series of inspiring conversations and an offer to join the new crypto team!

    Cross River is not your typical bank. It is backed by esteemed investors like KKR, Andreessen Horowitz, Battery Ventures, and Ribbit Capital. It provides banking-as-a-service to FinTechs like Stripe, Coinbase, and Affirm. For example, they power payments when you purchase a Peloton and pay for it in installments. Cross River also banks a number of crypto companies.

    Many large and small businesses were hurt in the pandemic. Cross River leveraged technology to become the 4th largest processor of the Payment Protection Program (PPP) loans. In so doing, the 13 year old bank with ~600 employees outdid much larger rivals like Wells Fargo.

    Now, the company is building a suite of offerings to enable FinTechs and other companies provide crypto payments, lending, and banking to their customers. Our mission is to onboard the next billion people into crypto by bringing crypto to FinTech. Iā€™m really excited to join this talented and passionate team. And we are still hiring. Letā€™s go!

    Ruminations šŸ§ 

    1. Meet people where they are

    A couple months ago I conducted a survey and learned that consumers would prefer to access digital assets through their existing financial accounts. I can see the logic, why open up a new account with an untrusted brand if you donā€™t have to?

    FinTechs like PayPal (392M users), CashApp (70M users), and Robinhood (23M users) are scratching that itch. These companies already enable customers to buy, sell and hold a limited set of crypto. But there is a LOT more they could be doing.

    2. What about banks?

    Only a handful of banks have enabled their Main Street customers to engage with digital assets. A year ago, Quontic Bank launched a bitcoin rewards checking account. Then a few months ago, Vast Bank became the first in the US to enable customers to buy, sell and hold crypto.

    But for the most part, the initial focus of big banks has been enabling institutional clients and high net worth individuals to custody crypto. BNY Mellon, US Bank, JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and others have made public moves. There are also banks working privately. Bank of America now holds over 160 patents related to blockchain.

    3. Why are banks moving gingerly?

    Initially, it was lack of understanding. But today, bank executives are putting in the work to explore crypto. The COO of BoA reportedly pivoted from being a crypto denier to a crypto supporter after investing hours watching lectures, testing out products and talking with experts.

    Now, I think the speed bumps are primarily regulatory. Banks are held to higher standards than FinTechs. Measures to safeguard consumers sometimes slow down innovation. Plus, regulations are still evolving and banks will need to build new fraud, AML, risk and compliance muscles to handle this new asset class.

    Lastly, some banks legacy technology systems are not well suited to meet the increasing demands of modern consumers. Many of these systems would need to be replaced or may require workarounds to integrate crypto solutions.

    As the fog rises, there will be a huge opportunity to partner with banks, FinTechs, and other companies to enable crypto payments, lending and banking services. Iā€™m excited to help make this happen.

    NewsšŸ—ž

    1. Metaverse continues to be all the rage

    * Grayscale published a report stating that the metaverse is a $1 trillion opportunity

    * The red hot housing market extends to the metaverse! This week two records were set! A single plot of land in Axie Infinity sold for 550 ETH ($2.5M). Also an estate of 116 parcels of land in Decentraland sold for 618,000 MANA ($3.2M).

    * I have been dipping my toes into MANA (Decentraland). Still figuring out how best to gain appropriate metaverse exposure. I recently learned about two funds which kinda operate like ETFs for metaverse cryptos: Makara Metaverse and Index Coop Metaverse. Disclaimer: I have not invested in these. Please do your own research. Let me know your thoughts!

    2. Hackers using Google Cloud to mine

    * 86% of 50 recently hacked Google Cloud accounts were used for crypto mining

    * Crypto mining requires large amounts of computation power to produce yield, leveraging Googleā€™s massive cloud computing eases that burden

    * But this is wrong! Unethical moves like this taint the industry and feed the false narrative that crypto belongs to shadowy underworld. Stop it, whoever you are!

    3. Davido launches a social token

    * Davido is a living Afrobeats legend. His music sets the tone for every occasion. He is by far the most followed African musician on Instagram with over 22 million fans and another 36 million across Facebook and Twitter. Iā€™m one of them. Full disclosure, Davidoā€™s was the last concert I attended pre-pandemic.

    * This week, the 29 year-old launched a social token ā€œEchokeā€ to give power back to the fansā€¦and cut out the middleman.

    * The tokens will be airdropped for free to fans for a year beginning Nov 28. Holders of the token will get free access to giveaways, NFTs, backstage passes, jobs, festivals, exclusive merchandise, media, and hospitality benefits. Iā€™m looking forward to checking this out! Stay tuned.

    Thatā€™s all folks! Thanks for hanging with me. Remember, no matter your circumstance, if you are able to read or listen to this then you have a lot to be thankful for. I hope you have a wonderful week.

    Best,

    Afo



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit afolabio.substack.com
  • Hey friends!

    My wife and I recently drove out for a beach weekend to celebrate my birthday. It was great to hear the crashing waves and feel the sand beneath my feet.

    I like to watch the sunrise on my birthday. I start the day with gratitude then I reflect on my purpose and aspirations. Recently, more than one friend remarked that crypto felt like a solution looking for a problem. They basically said crypto serves no purpose. I disagreed.

    What starts off looking like a toy can become big business (ex cellphones, internet, Facebook). I submit that itā€™s still early days but crypto is already solving real world problems today. This week, I will highlight a couple of them.

    Ruminations

    1. Store of value

    Problem

    During my freshman year at the University of Texas, $1 was equal to N130. My family lived in Nigeria, my parents were exchanging their hard-earned naira for US dollars so I could pursue our dreams.

    Since then, it has gotten much worse.

    In Jan 2015, $1 was N200 but by Jan 2017, $1 was N500. Within 2 years, the effective cost had increased by 2.5x! A $10,000 tuition bill which was equivalent to N2M in 2015 was suddenly N5M in 2017. No oneā€™s income went up by 2.5x in just 2 years. The devaluation of the naira has wrought untold pain on Nigerian families and businesses.

    Solution

    Inflation and devaluation are the evil twins robbing hard-working people of their purchasing power. One solution is to save in more stable assets such as US dollars. However, access to US dollars is restricted in some countries. Startups like Xend in Nigeria and Reserve in Latin America enable families to preserve their purchasing power by saving in dollar-backed stablecoins.

    One challenge with stablecoin deposits is that unlike banks, deposits are not all insured. Thus if the provider failed, customers could lose their savings. Please do your own research and consider using a portfolio strategy of spreading stablecoin deposits across a range of providers.

    2. Instant cross-border payments

    Problem

    My family is spread across 3 continents: North America, Europe and Africa. I often move funds across the regions for gifts, donations or investments. Itā€™s a pain!

    The three biggest pain points are: cost, friction, and speed.

    Cost: According to the World Bank, the average fees to send money to Africa is 8.3% (2020) - the highest in the world. I have previously touched on this here. Every dollar that goes to fees, could have gone to more productive uses like the education charity I recently founded.

    In 2020, we spent $46B fees on global cross-border payments. What if we could significantly reduce that?

    Solution

    I have tested out crypto solutions that enable instant, free-to-low cost cross-border payments. I have used the Bitcoin Lightning Network and stablecoins. These technologies clearly outperform some existing solutions like international wires.

    Recently, Meta (formerly known as Facebook) launched their Novi wallet. This digital wallet uses stablecoins to enable FREE cross-border payments. In the future, the wallet will be integrated into WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram reaching Metaā€™s 2.8 billion monthly active users. The Novi system would dwarf PayPal and CashAppā€™s reach.

    3. Play-to-earn games

    Problem

    Millions of people in The Philippines lost their jobs as the pandemic slowed down the economy. Unemployment amongst millennials reportedly shot up to 30% in some regions.

    Solution

    I recently watched the 18-minute documentary about the rise of play-to-earn in The Philippines. Check it out.

    In Cabanatuan City, locals started playing Axie Infinity, a video game where players earn rewards that can be exchanged for money. Everyone from 70-year old shopkeepers to out-of-work professionals seemed to be diving in. Locals earn up to $500 a month, about twice the minimum wage in Phillippines.

    Axie Infinity is a trading and battling strategy game. Users purchase creatures called Axies, which are digitized NFTs. Players can collect, breed, raise, battle, and trade them. The game allows users to cash out their tokens into local currency.

    There are 3 things you need to start playing today: a smart phone, high speed internet, and funds to buy Axies. Over the past year, the cost of acquiring Axies has increased beyond $500, now out of reach of many Filipinos. The gaming community rallied and developed scholarship programs where Axies can be rented out in a revenue-sharing model.

    To be clear, I donā€™t think this game is the one solution to world poverty. But I love how it gives people an opportunity to improve their lives. I love how gaming reaches people who would otherwise not explore crypto. I am now wondering if Nigeria could see a big boom in play-to-earn gaming. Nigeria has over 200 million people but

    * 62% are under the age of 25

    * 33% are unemployed

    * 70% have access to the internet

    Feels like a recipe for growth!

    News

    1. El Salvador to build Bitcoin City

    * El Salvador will build a modern carbon neutral city with NO income, property, capital gains or payroll taxes; there will only be 10% sales tax

    * The country is issuing a 10-year $1B bond with 6.5% yield. $500M will be used to build volcano geothermal energy, bitcoin mining facilities a infrastructure for the city. The other $500M will be used to buy more bitcoin but it will be locked up for 5-year period

    * Bold moves. El Salvador is a poor country aiming to be the Singapore of Latin America. Locals have raised questions about whether the president is over-reaching. I donā€™t know enough to have an opinion on this but Iā€™m sensitive to dictatorial tendencies given my experience growing up in Nigeria.

    2. Advertising making crypto ubiquitous

    * Crypto.com recently unveiled a $100M global advertising campaign spearheaded by Matt Damon and featuring one of my favorite quotes ā€œfortune favors the braveā€. They also bought 20-year naming rights to the storied Staples Arena where LA Lakers play.

    * FTX has been heavily investing in sports advertising. In basketball, they have the naming rights to the Miami Heats. In football, they have taken out ads for the Super Bowl 2022. In baseball, they run a ton of ads during the World Series. In formula 1, they sponsor the Mercedes team.

    * All these investments are making crypto ubiquitous. But are they working? I think itā€™s great for name recognition but I dunno if the uptick in customers will cover the costs. Also, is the stadium sponsor curse dead? Between 2001 and 2003, 11 companies sponsoring sports stadia filed for bankruptcy.

    3. CitiBank to hire 100 crypto

    * CitiBank plans to hire 100 in their blockchain and digital assets division

    * Yet another bank investing in a crypto team. However, a segment of crypto folk are very pro-decentralization and not big fans of banks. We are in a tight labor market and there is a war for crypto talent. Will Citi be able to get the talent they want?

    Thatā€™s all this week. Thanks for sticking with me. I hope you have a wonderful Thanksgiving.

    Best,

    Afo



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit afolabio.substack.com
  • Hey friends!

    I want to invite you on a trip down memory lane. Can you guess which year these events happened?

    * President Clinton is engulfed in a sex scandal

    * Titanic becomes the first movie to gross over $1B

    * The wordā€™s largest company is born when Exxon acquires Mobil for $74Bn

    Itā€™s 1998. Gosh, I feel old :-)

    Crypto continues to march ahead at a dizzying rate. I took a couple weeks off as I completed a Product Management certification while also working on a couple other things. Stay tuned, more updates to come.

    Ruminations

    1. Crypto in 2021 = Internet in 1998

    * My dad is a tech nerd. In the late 1990s, we lived in a small town in Nigeria. My dad would occasionally go on business trips abroad. He would ALWAYS excitedly return home with a new gadget to play with.

    * It must have been around 1998 when he plopped my sister and I down in front of his computer to create our first email accounts. I remember choosing my yahoo domain name. He said we could use our new email accounts to send messages to our friends. Trouble is, most of our friends wouldnā€™t get online for a couple more years :-) Dad was early but he was right. Thanks Dad!

    * Some fresh analysis suggests that crypto adoption today is where internet adoption was in 1998. Thatā€™s crazy early! 1998 is more than 5 years before Facebook was established. Uber and Airbnb came along 10 years later. With this in mind, itā€™s entirely possible that the killer applications of Web 3.0 / crypto have not even be created yet. Thatā€™s wild!

    * Letā€™s also remember that back in the late 1990s, many people thought the internet was a fad. Nobel-prize winning economist, Paul Krugman, famously said that by 2005, it would be abundantly clear that the internetā€™s impact on society would be no greater than the fax machine. Ouch! That did not age well.

    2. Crypto crystal ball

    * I donā€™t know if anyone in 1998 accurately predicted how deeply the internet would transform our lives. Today, we find love online. We learn online. We shop online. We work online. Itā€™s difficult to imagine our lives without the internet.

    * Web 1.0 was the first wave of the internet. The focus was connecting information. The killer application was search. Suddenly a teenage girl in rural Malawi was no longer limited to the 11 books in her school library. Now she could Google questions and gain insights gleaned from around the world.

    * Web 2.0 was the next wave. This connected people. Social media was the big kahuna. It started with MySpace then Facebook, Instagram, Snap and bunch of other platforms. Long lost family members reconnected decades after separation. Corporations built advertising fortunes off our digital footprints.

    * Web 3.0 is coming. It will connect information, people, places and devices. It will be decentralized as opposed to the current structure where data ownership is concentrated in large organizations. Users will no longer just be a commodity. Rather, users will be owners. It would also leverage advances in artificial intelligence and machine learning to offer a more intelligent internet experience. The metaverse will be part of Web 3.0. Itā€™s a big enough deal that Facebook went ahead and renamed itself Meta.

    * Now, I am still wrapping my head around Web 3.0 and the metaverse. The best way to learn is by exploring. Dive in and tinker away. The metaverse is a virtual environment for play and work. It is enabled by a suite of technologies including virtual and augmented reality, blockchain, cryptocurrency, NFTs and more.

    3. Young guys are leading the way

    * I love data. There is a ton of data out there but itā€™s of varying quality. One has to sieve through to separate the facts from the ā€œalternate factsā€. The Pew Research Center is a highly respected purveyor of good data.

    * A recent Pew study found that 16% of Americans (~51M people) have dabbled in crypto. Unsurprisingly, the proportion decreases with age. Older techies like my dad are few and far between. Interestingly, 43% of young American men (18-29 years old) have invested, traded or used crypto. However, only 19% of women of the same age have. Thatā€™s a huge gap.

    * I was surprised to see that racial minority groups (Asian, Hispanic, Black) are outpacing the majority in crypto exploration. However, this is not mirrored in the crypto labor force. Rare, do I see leaders in the industry who are from minority groups. These groups are often under-represented among the rank and file of leading crypto firms.

    * If crypto is going to be a building block for Web 3.0. Then itā€™s essential that a broad-section of society is involved in shaping that future. Ideally, the crypto labor force would mirror society. Crypto is a big tent. There is room for you, whoever you are.

    News

    1. Crypto Capital: New York vs Miami

    * Eric Adams, the newly elected Mayor of New York plans to take his first 3 paychecks in Bitcoin. He wants New York City to be the center of crypto

    * Mayor Saurez of Miami announced that residents would be eligible to receive bitcoin dividend from the cityā€™s crypto project

    * I love this friendly rivalry between these two cities. A lil friendly competition helps drive the industry forward.

    2. Presidential advisors say stablecoins could drive efficiencies

    * Presidentā€™s Working Group on Financial Markets released a report finding that stablecoins can drive significant efficiencies

    * However, they need more regulations to safeguard consumers. They recommend only FDIC insured institutions issue stablecoins.

    * I think this great. Regulation is a marker of growth. Clarity enables even more growth.

    3. Robinhood: Crypto results plummet

    * Robinhoodā€™s crypto revenue fell 78% from Q2 ($233M) to Q3 ($51M) as the number of monthly active users (MAU) slipped from 21.3M to 18.6M.

    * Q2 was exceptional due to dogecoin hysteria and broader crypto bull run. Would love to understand how this performance compares to the likes of Coinbase and Squareā€™s CashApp.

    * All is not lost, Robinhoodā€™s Crypto COO recently shared that they have 1.5M people on their waitlist to use their new crypto wallets.

    Thatā€™s all folks! Thanks for sticking with me. As always, Iā€™d love to hear your thoughts. Have a great week!



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit afolabio.substack.com
  • Last week, I enjoyed sharing my thoughts on Pay like you email in longer form. Thanks for the feedback. This week, I have been reflecting on toys, Facebook and Kim Kardashian. Read on to learn how these relate to crypto.

    1. Toy or the next big thing?

    6 hours!

    We were all forced to detox from Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp for 6 hours during the outage this week. It got me thinking about how entrenched Facebook Inc has become in our lives and global business. When I created my Facebook account in college, my goal was to keep up with classmatesā€¦. and check out the ladies :-) Side note, my first contact with my wife was through Facebook. Thanks Zuck!

    What first started as a toy used by teenagers has become a global phenomenon with 2.9 billion users each month. This ā€œtoyā€ produced $28.5B advertising revenue in Q2 2021. It is deeply woven into the fabric of our lives whether you live in Atlanta or Zanzibar.

    A couple years ago, Chris Dixon of Andressen Horowitz, said that the next big thing will look like a toy. He gave the example of how telephones were dismissed in the 1800s because the technology was still clunky. Naysayers did not believe that businesses would ditch telegrams for telephones. They underestimated the rapid evolution of telephone technology. Today, 6.4 billion people have smartphones.

    Along those lines, people who dismiss bitcoin ought to take a closer look first. What looks like a toy today could rapidly evolve and catch you unaware. Many folks erroneously focus on the volatile price of bitcoin without recognizing the game changing technology that underpins it. They do not recognize that there are thousands of sharp software engineers working on it. They get caught up in the FUD (fear, uncertainty, and doubt) in the news cycles but never study for themselves. Donā€™t be like that. Remain open-minded. Study for yourself. Then decide.

    Chris Dixon ā€œWhy the next big thing in tech will look like a toyā€. Listening time is 4 minutes.

    2. Kim Kardashian and millennial millionaires

    Kim Kardashian hosted SNL this weekend. Did you see it? Her familyā€™s rise from the fringe of Hollywood to cultural icons would not have been possible a generation ago. The rise of new technology and platforms enables savvy people to create wealth in new ways. Today, Kim is worth $1.2 billion.

    The portfolios of millennial and Gen Z millionaires increasingly look different from older millionaires. A CNBC survey found that 47% of younger millionaires have at least 25% of their net worth in digital assets like crypto and NFTs. On the other hand, 98% of baby boomer millionaires do not own NFTs and are not considering it.

    This reminds me of how Warren Buffett famously missed investing in tech companies like Facebook. Donā€™t get me wrong, I am still a Buffett fan but I have recognized that it pays to be open-minded to new technology. Itā€™s important to read widely and challenge the recommendations you receive. There may be newer, faster or just different ways to achieve your goal. I canā€™t wait to see the wave of new careers unleashed by crypto, NFT and Web 3.0. Itā€™s already happening..

    3. Number of Gen Z crypto users could 5x by 2025

    All this talk about toys and younger millionaires got me thinking about Gen Z crypto adoption. I wanted to understand how many Gen Zers hold crypto today and what that could look like in 2025. So I did some back of envelope calculations then fired up a spreadsheet. Hereā€™s where I landed:

    * Gen Z in 2021: 29.4 million users. I estimated the number of Gen Z crypto users in 3 ways ranging from 28.7 to 30.4 million users globally.

    * Gen Z in 2025: 147 million users. I developed 3 scenarios to assess what the Gen Z crypto adoption could look like in 4 years. My estimates ranged from 48 to 247 million users globally.

    If you are curious or nerdy like me, you can flip through my analysis here.

    I hope you have a wonderful week. Let me know your thoughts.



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit afolabio.substack.com