Tokenomics: Financing with Tokens

Instructors:           Andreas Park & Zissis Poulos



 

 

Tokens as financial instruments

  • to understand token/coin offerings, we must first understand
    • what is a security
    • who you can sell to
    • what's different about tokens
  • then
    • what types of tokens exists?
    • how do we assess their value?

The crypto-asset landscape

Current (Nov 2022) Status

Current (Nov 2022) Status

VCs/Funds in Crypto

Time for the Ugly?

Now for the ugly truth

Source: Satis Group LLC

Now for the ugly truth

  • New.bitcoin.com using Tokendata:
    • 902 crowdsales in 2017
    • 142 failed at the funding stage
    • 276 have since failed
    • => 46% of 2017 ICOs have already failed.
  • Some comparative stats:
    • U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports: 1st year failure rate of businesses with employees is about 20%.
    • Gosh (2012, HBS study):
      • of 2,000 VC-backed startups $1 million from 2004 to 2010,
      • 75% never return cash to investors
      • 30% of the 75% implode.

How are tokens brought to market?

Old way: own website etc

Dedicated services: Coinlist

Initial Dex Offering

Initial Exchange Offering

Cumulative sales during the first bull-market

Data: coinschedule

$25B total

$18.7B in '18

Speaking of Coinschedule

Dedicated services: Coinlist

  • Token sale management tools
    • Pre-sale allocations
    • Whitelisting
    • Investment control (tiers etc)
    • Analytics and documentation
  • Compliance framework
    • KYC/AML, verification tools
    • Legal support
  • Payments
    • ETH, BTC, USD with phishing protection etc

Around 1B in token sales so far

  • Popularized in 2019
  • Partnership with a crypto exchange (e.g., Binance, Gate.io)
    • Trust: expectation that exchange has performed due diligence
    • Reach: event promoted to exchange's userbase (reduced marketing budget)
    • Liquidity: token listed on exchange that handles IEO
    • Vesting options
  • BUT:
    • Strong centralization: exchanges become gatekeepers
    • Large fees paid to the exchange by project
    • Exchange can enforce holding/staking requirements for their own token  

Initial Exchange Offering

https://cryptorank.io/

IEO Data for 2022

  • about 490 projects
  • total raised about $440M
  • \(\approx\) $1M per project
  • Popularized in 2020
  • Distribution via launchpad/DEX (e.g., Uniswap, BSCpad, DAO maker)
    • More decentralized
    • Low cost, no fees to an exchange
    • Participants retain custody
    • Immediate liquidity and trading via AMMs
    • User buys "IOU"s -> receives tokens during Token Generation Event
  • BUT:
    • Still have to satisfy launchpad criteria (staking, whitelisting)
    • Lopsided towards DeFi, sophisticated DeFi users

Initial Dex Offering

https://cryptorank.io/

IDO Data for 2022

  • about 550 projects
  • total raised about $180M
  • \(\approx\) $400K per project
count Total Raised (M) Mean Raised (M) Mean ROI Mean ATH ROI
IEO 324 266 1.8 28x 47x
IDO 779 35 0.25 10x 30x

Smaller projects opt for IDO

https://cryptorank.io/

Data for 2021

What is a security?

  • most conversion contracts; subscription to shares, stock, units or interests; share or interest in a trust etc;
  • Any profit-sharing agreement or certificate.
  • Interest in an oil, natural gas or mining lease, claim or royalty; collateral trust certificates; non-insurance income or annuity contracts
  • Any investment contract.
  • Derivatives that are prescribed to be a security.

What is a security? Ontario

  • Any instrument or unit commonly known as a security.
     
  • Any title to, or interest in, the capital, assets, property, profits, earnings or royalties of any person.
     
  • Any option, subscription to or other interest in a security.
     
  • A debt security or a share, stock, unit, unit certificate, participation certificate, certificate of share or interest, preorganization certificate or subscription that is not [regulated in some other way as some kind of deposit]
  • A crypto asset – other than one that falls within [other definitions]

Sidebar: “crypto asset” means a digital representation of value or contractual rights, which may be transferred and stored electronically, using distributed ledger or similar technology;




 

Sidebar: Designation orders (CMA Section 127) (paraphrased)

  1. If the Chief Regulator considers it not in  the public's interest, then it can designate a security not to be a security.
  2. If the Chief Regulator considers it in the public interest, it can designate
    • a crypto asset to be a security;
    • a crypto asset to be a derivative.

What is a security? Ontario

Key takeaway: many investment contracts can be deemed securities

What is a security? The Howey Test

Note: in Canada, it is the Pacific Coin test

What is a security? The Howey Test

  • 1946 U.S. Supreme Court case of SEC v. W.J. Howey Co.
  • instrument = security if
    • involves investment of money or other tangible or definable consideration used in a common enterprise
    • with reasonable expectation of profits to be derived primarily from the entrepreneurial or managerial efforts of others.
  • Note from furniture store to finance a customer’s purchases:
    • not a security (purpose is to facilitate the purchase)
  • Notes issued by a corporation for the general use of the company
    • buyer is primarily interested in the economic gain from the entrepreneurial efforts of others => is a security!
  • Form (formal certificate, nominal interests in the physical assets, etc) is irrelevant.

So: is PoS-ETH a security?

What is a coin/token a security? Swiss Regulator's View

  • Securities regulation:
    • ensure that market participants can base their decisions regarding investments such as equities or bonds on a reliable and defined set of information.
    • Trading should be fair, reliable and offer efficient price formation.
  • Legal definitions:
    • Standardised certificated or uncertificated securities, derivatives and intermediated securities which are
    • suitable for mass standardised trading
    • publicly offered for sale in same structure/denomination or are placed with more than 20 clients

Token and Coin Financing Categories

  • a debt or equity claim on the issuer.
  • Asset tokens promise, for example, a share in future company earnings or future capital flows.
  • Economic function: analogous to equities, bonds or derivatives.
  • Also: Tokens that enable physical assets to be traded on the blockchain

Payment

Asset

Utility

  • intended to provide access digitally to an application or service by means of a blockchain-based infrastructure.
  • Synonymous with cryptocurrencies; intended to be used, now/in future, as
    • a means of payment for acquiring goods or services or
    • as a means of money or value transfer.
  • Cryptocurrencies give rise to no claims on their issuer.

Secondary features

  • underwriting and offering of a third parties tokens is a licensed activity
    • => must become broker-dealer
  • issuance of tokens with interest-like return promise
    • => deposit character
    • => must obtain a bank license
  • anyone who maintains payment services is subject to AML (not for utility though)
  • US and Canada have provisions for private firms
    • Reg D (USA => SAFT-compliant)
    • Exempt offering memorandum (Canada)
  • token contract can restrict who can own and transfer the token!
    • => maintain list of accredited investor IDs
    • => restrict issuance and transfers to "suitable" investors
  • Simple Agreement for Future Tokens (“SAFT”) 

The SAFT protocol

  • Premise
    • utility or payment token is not a security once it is in operation.
    • before operation it is a security
  • Idea:
    • Simple Agreement for Future Tokens (“SAFT”) 
    • limit investor-base before usability to accredited investors by using a forward contract
    • don't worry about the "after"
  • Recent trend:
    • private, Reg-D compliant tokens (almost all 2018 fall under this rule)
    • on-chain "regulator" = limit the addresses that can trade

Source: Harbour (a tech firm)

Who can buy a security, who can you sell it to?

The financing journey

  • own funds
  • friends and family
  • angel investors 
  • institutional money (private equity or venture capital)
  • public:
    • accredited investors ("exempt market")
    • crowdfunding
    • general

Considerations for Canada

  • If you want to legally run an ICO and
    • reach a large group
    • have it tradable, 
  • then you either
    • need to abide by the strict public offerings rules, or
    • target only accredited investors ("exempt market offering memorandum"), or
    • avoid Canadians/Americans
    • hope that your coin does not get classified as a security.

The financing journey: the exempt market

  • accredited investors
    • Outside friends and family, entrepreneurs can approach wealthy individuals who meet certain criteria
    • Income about $200K, wealth (non-leveraged) in excess of $1M, etc
    • commonly these are Angels or limited partners in VC funds 
  • Datasource: Ontario Securities Commission

The financing journey: the public

  • public listings come with the full regulatory reporting burden
  • Idea of securities regulation:
    • ensure that market participants can base their decisions regarding investments such as equities or bonds on a reliable and defined set of information.
    • Trading should be fair, reliable and offer efficient price formation.
  • accredited investors are considered to be "sophisticated enough" not to get easily duped
    • => that is why they are "exempt"
  • "third" route: Crowdfunding
    • Recently permitted by the SEC in the US and the CSA in Canada; restrictions (among others)

    • Limits for investors (per firm and total portfolio value)

    • Must used registered platform

    • CTPs have recently been informed to limit new investments to $50K

Taxonomy of Tokens

Blockchain Tech Stack: Where would tokens matter?


Infrastructure
 

reward and
internal currency

usage fee
or
incentive


usage fee
 


Service
 


Application
 

Tech Stack Layer

Role of Token

Tokens standards

  • Most tokens to date run on Ethereum.
  • https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-20
  • Common language: "Our token is ERC-20 compliant"
  • ERC=Ethereum Request for Comment
  • Set of 6 mandatory functions that yield 4 items:
    • total token supply,
    • account balance,
    • transfer of  token from one party to another;
    • Approve the use of token as a monetary asset.
  • Common standards:
    • ERC-20: fungible token
    • ERC-721: non-fungible
    • ERC-1155: mix of both
  • tokens are a re-imagination of value, ownership, use, rewards
     
  • tokens live on a single infrastructure and can interact with other tokens
     
  • tokens are immediately transferable  & immediately usable in DeFi
     
  • token can be programmed to have many features and have many different uses

  • tokens can assign ownership to "things" that could not be owned before

What's a crypto-token and what's special about it?

  • tokens are immediately transferable
     
  • tokens can be used immediately in DeFi
     
  • token can be programmed to have many features
     
  • tokens live on a single infrastructure and can interact with other tokens

What's special about tokens

Tokens by use

payments:

  • you use them strictly to pay for something
  • example: native cryptocurrencies

utility

  • you use them to access a specific service of function
  • example: filecoin
     

stablecoins

  • digital representation of fiat money
  • centralized/decentralized
  • examples: DAI, USDC, USDT

governance

  • voting rights to determine parameters of a project
  • example: UNI, Compound etc

asset

  • representation of ownership
  • pool claims, digital items
  • example: receipts from UniSwap, Compound, NFTs

derivatives

  • tokens based on other tokens & functions
  • Example: tokensets
     

Disclaimer: this list in non-exhaustive, new ideas come up every day!

“I believe every ICO I’ve seen is a security. … ICOs that are securities offerings, we should regulate them like we regulate securities offerings. End of story.”

 

Jay Clayton, Chairman, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, testimony before the United States Senate, February 6, 2018

“I have asked the SEC’s Division of Enforcement to continue to police this area vigorously and recommend enforcement actions against those that conduct initial coin offerings in violation of the federal securities laws”

Tokens are immediately tradable

tokens enter the public market and become accessible to the general public => huge implications on transparency and disclosure requirements

So what if they are securities?

  • Regulation of public securities is burdensome
  • Early-stage firms (often just an idea!) unlikely to tick all boxes that IPO firms must tick.
  • Crypto-assets are available world-wide
    • Which regulator do you need to satisfy?
    • How do you resolve conflicting rules?

Regulators in the US

  • Securities and Exchange Commission
  • Commodities and Futures Trading Commission
  • Federal Reserve Bank
  • Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
  • FINRA
  • State regulators
  • FDIC
  • Congress (for laws)
  • The Executive (for executive orders)












     

Regulation in Canada

  • Provincial Securities Commissions:
    • British Columbia Securities Commission
    • Alberta Securities Commission
    • Financial and Consumer Affairs Authority (Saskatchewan)
    • Manitoba Securities Commission
    • Ontario Securities Commission
    • Autorite des marches financiers
    • Financial and Consumer Services Commission (New Brunswick)
    • Superintendent of Securities, Department of Justice and Public Safety, Prince Edward Island
    • Nova Scotia Securities Commission
    • Securities Commission of Newfoundland and Labrador
    • Superintendent of Securities, Northwest Territories
    • Superintendent of Securities, Yukon
    • Superintendent of Securities, Nunavut
  • plus provincial ministries that oversee the commissions
  • Bank of Canada + Dept pf Finance
  • IIROC
  • FINTrac
  • OSFI
  • CDIC
  • Parliament, Privy Council, PM's Office

Regulators in Singapore

  • Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS)




















     

Categories => Securities? (Swiss finma view)

  • treated as a security
  • in pre-financing and pre-sale phases of an ICO, tokens that confer claims to acquire tokens in the future

    • treated as securities

Payment

Asset

Utility

  • if only to pay for application or service:
    • not a security
  • if additionally or only has an investment purpose at the point of issue:

    • => treated as security

  • treated as money
    • => not a security

Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) View

  • Singapore is a developed country and it is anything but lawless.
  • It has bank, exchange, and securities regulation
  • The crypto world likes Singapore because they have provided clarity and they have ONE regulator to content with.
  • Cryptocurrencies = goods => transactions taxable
  • no cap gains tax
  • crypto exchanges require a licence
  • digital payments tokens as securities regulated under Securities and Futures Act (SFA).
  • payments services act (2019) => crypto & exchanges under MAS authority

Example: ML/TF laws

  • regulation of account issuance, money transfer services, e-money issuance, merchant acquisition, digital payment token services, FX
  • all have Service Act Requirements in line with ML/TF regulations, Tx monitoring, screening (sanctions, political exposed persons) and customer due diligence (KYC)

Historical data on ICO projects

Now for the ugly truth

Source: Satis Group LLC

Data from early 2018

Anybody can create a token

The Squid Game Token: does nothing  than borrow the name from the game

total gain: 230,000%

The Shiba Inu coin is nothing. It stands for nothing, it's linked to nothing. 

What is it that an ICO can do that you cannot get elsewhere?

  • Entrepreneur’s vision?
    • => use crypto-token investor appetite as a benchmark. 
    • => like crowdfunding, learn product demand.
  • Lower commissions with cryptocurrencies (no intermediaries to feed).

  • Can be pre-programmed to carry out the company’s incentive payouts — or returns — as set out in White Papers and Investor Prospectuses.

  • Contingent fundraising.

  • Milestone automation.

What is it that an ICO can do that you cannot get elsewhere?

My view: currently, the biggest difference to "traditional" world is:

Venture financing open to everyone

Small minimum investment amounts

Global investor base

Tokens are immediately tradable

Classification (Source: Satis Group LLC)

  1. Scam (pre-trading) (never intended to go anywhere)
  2. Failed (pre-trading): (not enough funding)
  3. Gone Dead (pre-trading): got funding, never made Github code contribution
  4. Dwindling (trading): got funding, wrote code, but hasn't gotten much tangible
  5. Promising (trading): as dwindling but got more done
  6. Successful (trading): steams ahead

Now for the ugly truth

Now for the ugly truth

Source: Satis Group LLC

Now for the ugly truth

  • New.bitcoin.com using Tokendata:
    • 902 crowdsales in 2017
    • 142 failed at the funding stage
    • 276 have since failed
    • => 46% of 2017 ICOs have already failed.
  • Some comparative stats:
    • U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports: 1st year failure rate of businesses with employees is about 20%.
    • Gosh (2012, HBS study):
      • of 2,000 VC-backed startups $1 million from 2004 to 2010,
      • 75% never return cash to investors
      • 30% of the 75% implode.

Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) View

  • https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-essex-59069662

Payment

Asset

Utility

  • The crypto world likes Singapore because they have provided clarity
  • Cryptocurrencies = goods => transactions taxable
  • no cap gains tax
  • crypto exchanges require a licence
  • digital payments tokens can be considered securities under Securities and Futures Act (SFA).
  • payments services act (2019) => crypto & exchanges under MAS authority
  • treated as money
    • => not a security

Common features of ICOs

  • many different sales mechanisms
    • auctions
    • staggered sales (prices increase from phase to phase)
    • usually send money to smart contracts
  • often, you buy a token that you get to use for a coin in the future
  • commonly, there is a foundation that manages future issuance
    • the role of the foundations are often undefined
    • foundations are located in low touch regulation jurisdictions

How do we evaluate tokens?

Blockchain Tokens: A New Financing Tool?

  • Since Jan 2016: $31 billion for 1,700+ early-stage blockchain start-ups
  • TMX Venture (successful, since 1999, for junior firms)
    • $42 billion market cap (since 1999!)
    • In 2018: 52 IPOs, $2.2 billion

Lessons?

  • Significant interest in FinTech
  • Appetite by retail investors for risk/early-stage firms
  • Possible to raise funds directly from investors
  • VCs and intermediaries do provide a service
    • money does not substitute for business plan/advice
    • "wisdom of the crowd" is non-existent (?)

Tokenomics:
When Tokens Beat Equity

Katya Malinova & Andreas Park

Blockchain Tech Stack: Where would tokens matter?


Infrastructure
 

reward and
internal currency

usage fee
or
incentive

usage fee
participation incentive


Service
 


Application
 

Tech Stack Layer

Role of Token

Tokens as Seignorage Money to Power a Network

Infrastructure

reward and internal currency

Sustainability of network security

        Chiu & Koeppl (2016), Budish (2018)

How do cryptocurrencies have value?

        Biais, Bisiere, Bouvard, Casamatta (2016), Schilling and Uhlig (2018)        

Cryptocurrencies as payment for "real" costs

        Sockin and Xiong (2018)

Development and subsequent seignorage 

         Canidio (2018), Catalini and Gans (2018)

Blockchain Platforms: Economic Transactions with "Decentralization"

Two-sided markets with fixed roles

        Consumers - Producers

        Consumers - Intermediaries - Producers

Traditional economy

Multi-sided or peer-to-peer markets

        Consumers = Producers

        requires platform building

Decentralized economy

Traditional "centralized" economy

Service Platform Tokens: Enabling Decentralization?

usage fee or incentive

Service

What is the relationship between token prices and platform adoption?

         Cong, Li, and Wang (2018)

How do you finance development without future income flow?

         Canidio (2018)

How do you get people to contribute to a peer to peer platform?

         Li and Mann (2018)         

Tokens as Payments: a New Financing Tool?

usage fee

Application

What can (utility) tokens finance that traditional securities cannot? 

Chod and Lyandres (MS 2021):

  • Token \(\Rightarrow\) underinvestment, except under VC under-diversification

Davydiuk, Gupta, and Rosen (2018)

  • Token retention policy is a quality signalling tool                             

Tokens as Payments: a New Financing Tool?

usage fee

Application

What can (utility) tokens finance that traditional securities cannot? 

Lee and Parlour (RFS 2022)

  • Tokens as crowdfunding tool that allows producers to extract untapped customer surplus

Malinova and Park (2018)

  • Tokens \(\equiv\) output pre-sale; generically equivalent to debt and equity and better than equity under moral hazard

Shakhnov and Zaccaria (2022)

  • ICO sale to entice early adopters who provide network externalities

price

An Economic Model of ICO

  • entrepreneur wants to produce a good or service
  • Demand is uncertain and only revealed after production. 
  • \(\Rightarrow\) maximizes monopoly profits

demand

marginal cost

marginal revenue

general idea: sell future output

two approaches for token sales

sell a fraction of future revenue

sell units of future output

Token Financing

  • we call it revenue sharing
  • we call this output presale

price

demand

marginal cost

marginal revenue

Entrepreneur does not internalize the effect of an extra output unit on the token value for the tokenholders!

Result: overproduction

Output Presale

price

demand

marginal cost

marginal revenue

Result: underproduction

Revenue Sharing

\(\Rightarrow\) shifts marginal revenue for entrepreneuer left because get only fraction of revenue

revenue sharing: underproduction

output presale: overproduction

\(c\)

\(MR\)

"does not internalize" = externality

address externality: TAX!

here: tax future token income

incremental token income gets shared

\(\Rightarrow\) combine the two to get the monopoly quantity!

  • issue \(t\) tokens ex ante
  • share \(\alpha_t\) of new tokens
  • token share \[\alpha_t=\frac{t}{c+t}\]

Is token financing inferior?

Is token financing inferior? No!

Idea:

entrepreneur can influence expected demand

  • costs her more but 
  • more likely to get high demand

with effort

without effort

  • common topic in corporate finance
  • very relevant in "decentralized" world where developers are scattered around the globe
  • also applicable to, e.g. established firms that do something new

assume \[\textit{NPV}(\text{effort})>0>\textit{NPV}(\text{no effort})\]

Token Issuance with Moral Hazard

  • costs her less but 
  • more likely to get low demand

Investors (equity or token holders) only finance the project if the entrepreneur undertakes the effort

Solve for the optimal funding conditional on the entrepreneur taking the effort
 

Derive conditions such that the entrepreneur undertakes effort

Token Issuance with Moral Hazard

1.

2.

Key insight: a token contract incentivizes effort better than equity (similarly to canonical debt vs. equity insights)

Optimal token contract has debt features:

  • get nothing if demand is low (only original tokenholders get anything)
  • benefit if demand is high

all projects that can be financed by equity can be financed by the optimal token contract but

Token Issuance with Moral Hazard

some projects that can be financed by optimal tokens contracts cannot be financed by equity.

Simple model of revenue-based ICO vs equity financing from the standard corporate finance + IO toolbox

Theorem 1: Without frictions,  an optimal token contract finances the same projects as equity

Theorem 2: With entrepreneurial moral hazard,

  • any equity-financeable project can be financed by an optimal token
  • some token-financeable projects cannot be financed by equity

​\(\Rightarrow\) There is economic and conceptual merit to token financing

Summary

Another Model: Cattelini & Gans (2018)

  • Gans and Cattelini (March 11, 2018)
    • model as three stage process:
      • Stage 1: offer
      • Stage 2: first round of interaction
      • Stage 3: possible additional issuance of tokens
    • ICO used as a pre-sale mechanism
    • "monetary policy" = possible future issuance
    • Results:
      • crypto tokens reveal consumer demand
      • => "sometimes" entrepreneurial returns with crypto > with traditional equity financing.
      • Lack of commitment in monetary policy can undermine saving
  • formally, coins need to be thought of with models such as 
    • small open economy in which
    • means of payment =/ unit of account
  • amount of money in the system affects
    • savings
    • price level
    • speculation
    • goods market production
  • => monetary theory is just as relevant as corporate finance...

Further Economic Considerations I

Further Economic Considerations II

  • equity token
    • "forever" share of profit (not revenue!)
  • utility tokens 
    • can be used once
    • pre-sell "one round" of usage = one round of revenue
    • limit in price rise to what people are willing to pay for the good once
    • conceptually closer to a money-market instrument (like commercial paper)

Tokenomics (MBA)

By Andreas Park

Tokenomics (MBA)

This set of slides describes tokens as a form of financing of operations.

  • 558