Long-term bullish on crypto technology, cautious in selecting tokens, heavily invested in companies that leverage crypto infrastructure to amplify advantages and achieve compound growth.
Article by: Santiago Roel Santos
Translation by: Luffy, Foresight News
While writing this article, the crypto market is experiencing a crash. Bitcoin hits the $60,000 mark, SOL falls back to the price levels during FTX bankruptcy asset liquidation, and Ethereum drops to $1,800. I won’t bother reiterating the long-term bearish arguments.
This article aims to explore a more fundamental question: why tokens cannot achieve compound growth.
Over the past few months, I have maintained a view: fundamentally, crypto assets are severely overvalued, and Metcalfe’s Law cannot justify current valuations, while the disconnect between industry real-world applications and asset prices may persist for years.
Imagine this scenario: “Dear liquidity providers, stablecoin trading volume has increased by 100 times, but our returns to you are only 1.3 times. Thank you for your trust and patience.”
What is the strongest opposition to all these objections? “You’re too pessimistic, you don’t understand the intrinsic value of tokens — this is a whole new paradigm.”
I am precisely very clear about the intrinsic value of tokens, and this is exactly where the core problem lies.
The Power of Compound Growth Engines
Berkshire Hathaway’s market cap is now about $1.1 trillion, not because Buffett’s timing is perfect, but because the company has the ability to grow via compounding.
Every year, Berkshire reinvests profits into new businesses, expands profit margins, acquires competitors, thereby increasing intrinsic value per share, and the stock price follows suit. This is an inevitable outcome because the underlying economic engine is continuously strengthening.
This is the core value of stocks. It represents ownership of a profit-reinvesting engine. After management earns profits, they allocate capital, plan growth, cut costs, buy back shares — each correct decision becomes a foundation for the next growth cycle, creating compounding.
$1 growing at 15% annually for 20 years will become $16.37; $1 at 0% interest over 20 years remains $1.
Stocks can turn $1 profit into $16 of value; tokens, on the other hand, can only turn $1 in fees into $1 in fees, with no appreciation.
Show Your Growth Engine
Let’s consider what happens when a private equity fund acquires a company with an annual free cash flow of $5 million:
Year 1: Achieves $5 million in free cash flow; management reinvests it into R&D, building stablecoin custody channels, and debt repayment — three key capital allocation decisions.
Year 2: Each decision yields returns; free cash flow increases to $5.75 million.
Year 3: The previous gains continue to compound, supporting new decisions; free cash flow reaches $6.6 million.
This is a business growing at 15% compound annually. Going from $5 million to $6.6 million isn’t due to market hype, but because each capital allocation decision empowers the next, layer by layer. Persisting for 20 years, $5 million can eventually grow to $82 million.
Now, consider a crypto protocol earning $5 million in annual fees:
Year 1: Earns $5 million in fees, distributed entirely to token stakers, funds flow out of the system.
Year 2: Possibly earns another $5 million in fees, assuming users return, and again distributes all, funds flow out again.
Year 3: The total earnings depend entirely on how many users participate in this “casino.”
There’s no compound growth here, because in Year 1 there’s no reinvestment, so no growth wheel in Year 3. Relying solely on subsidy programs is far from enough.
Token Design Is Built That Way
This is not accidental but a strategic design at the legal level.
Looking back at 2017-2019, the U.S. SEC conducted strict investigations into all assets that appeared to be securities. At that time, all lawyers advising crypto protocol teams gave the same advice: tokens must not look like stocks. They cannot grant holders cash flow rights, governance rights over core R&D entities, or retained earnings; they must be defined as utility assets, not investment products.
Thus, the entire crypto industry deliberately designed tokens to clearly distinguish them from stocks. No cash flow rights to avoid dividend-like appearances; no governance over core R&D entities to avoid shareholder rights; no retained earnings to avoid resembling corporate treasuries; staking rewards are defined as network participation returns, not investment income.
This strategy worked. Most tokens successfully avoided being classified as securities, but at the same time, they lost all potential for compound growth.
From the very beginning, this asset class was intentionally designed to be incapable of generating long-term wealth through compound growth.
Developers hold equity, you only hold “coupons”
Every leading crypto protocol is backed by a profit-oriented core development entity. These entities develop software, control front-end interfaces, own branding rights, and coordinate enterprise partnerships. And what do token holders get? Only governance voting rights and a floating claim on fee income.
This pattern is ubiquitous in the industry. The core R&D entity controls talent, intellectual property, branding, enterprise contracts, and strategic choices; token holders can only receive a floating “coupon” tied to network usage, and a “privilege” to vote on proposals increasingly ignored by the R&D entity.
It’s no wonder that when Circle acquires protocols like Axelar, the acquirer is buying equity in the core R&D entity, not the token. Because equity can compound, tokens cannot.
Lack of clear regulatory intent has led to this distorted industry outcome.
What Exactly Are You Holding?
Setting aside all market narratives and ignoring price volatility, what can token holders truly obtain?
Staking Ethereum yields about 3%-4%, with returns determined by network inflation mechanisms and dynamically adjusted based on staking rates: more stakers mean lower yields; fewer stakers mean higher yields.
This is essentially a floating interest coupon linked to protocol mechanisms, not stocks, but bonds.
Sure, Ethereum’s price might rise from $3,000 to $10,000, but junk bonds can also double in value when spreads narrow — that doesn’t make them stocks.
The key question is: what mechanism drives your cash flow growth?
Stock cash flow growth: management reinvests profits to achieve compound growth, with growth rate = return on capital × reinvestment rate. As a holder, you participate in a continuously expanding economic engine.
Token cash flow: entirely depends on network usage × fee rate × staking participation; what you get is just a coupon fluctuating with block space demand. There’s no reinvestment mechanism or engine for compound growth in the entire system.
The large price swings lead people to mistakenly think they hold stocks, but from an economic structure perspective, what they actually hold is a fixed-income product with 60%-80% annual volatility. It’s a two-headed beast.
Most tokens, after accounting for inflation dilution, yield only 1%-3% real return. No fixed-income investor would accept such a risk-return profile, but the high volatility of these assets always attracts wave after wave of buyers — a true reflection of the “greater fool” theory.
Timing Power Law, Not Compound Power Law
This is why tokens cannot achieve value accumulation and compound growth. The market is gradually realizing this; it’s not stupid, but shifting toward crypto-related stocks. First, digital asset government bonds, then more capital flows into companies that leverage crypto tech to reduce costs, increase revenue, and realize compound growth.
Wealth creation in crypto follows a timing power law: those who make huge gains buy early and sell at the right time. My own portfolio also follows this pattern — crypto assets are called “liquidity venture capital” for a reason.
In stocks, wealth creation follows a compound power law: Buffett didn’t buy Coca-Cola to flip it quickly but held for 35 years, letting compound growth work.
In crypto, time is your enemy: holding too long erodes returns. High inflation mechanisms, low liquidity, high fully-diluted valuations, and a market with excess block space due to insufficient demand are key reasons. Ultra-liquid assets are among the few exceptions.
In stocks, time is your ally: the longer you hold assets with compound growth, the greater the returns driven by mathematical laws.
Crypto rewards traders; stocks reward holders. In reality, far more people get rich holding stocks than by trading.
I keep recalculating these data because every liquidity provider asks: “Why not just buy Ethereum directly?”
Let’s compare the trajectory of a compound-growth stock — Darden, Constellation Software, Berkshire — with Ethereum: the curve of a compound-growth stock steadily climbs upward and to the right because its underlying economic engine grows stronger each year; Ethereum’s price swings wildly, cycling up and down, and the total accumulated return depends entirely on your entry and exit timing.
Perhaps their final returns are similar, but holding stocks allows you to sleep peacefully at night, while holding tokens requires you to be a market prophet. “Long-term holding beats timing,” everyone understands this, but the real challenge is sticking to it. Stocks make long-term holding easier: cash flows support stock prices, dividends give patience, buybacks continue to compound during your holding period. Crypto makes long-term holding extremely difficult: fee income dries up, narratives shift, you have no fallback, no price floor, no stable coupon, only faith.
I would rather be a holder than a prophet.
Investment Strategy
If tokens cannot compound, and compounding is the core way to create wealth, then the conclusion is obvious.
The internet created trillions of dollars in value — where does that value ultimately flow? Not to TCP/IP, HTTP, SMTP protocols. They are public goods, hugely valuable, but cannot generate any returns for investors at the protocol layer.
Value ultimately flows to companies like Amazon, Google, Meta, Apple. They build businesses on top of protocols and achieve compound growth.
The crypto industry is repeating this pattern.
Stablecoins are gradually becoming the TCP/IP of the monetary world — highly practical, with high adoption rates, but whether the protocol itself can capture matching value remains uncertain. USDT is backed by a company with equity, not just a protocol, which offers important insights.
Those companies that integrate stablecoin infrastructure into their operations, reduce payment friction, optimize working capital, and cut foreign exchange costs are the true compound-growth entities. For example, a CFO switching cross-border payments to a stablecoin channel saving $3 million annually can reinvest that savings into sales, R&D, or debt repayment, and that $3 million will continue to compound. The protocol enabling this transaction only earns a fee, with no compounding.
The “Fat Protocol” theory suggests crypto protocols capture more value than application layers. But after seven years, public chains account for about 90% of the total crypto market cap, yet their fee share has plummeted from 60% to 12%; application layers contribute about 73% of fees but less than 10% of valuation. Markets are always efficient — these data say it all.
Today, the market still clings to the “Fat Protocol” narrative, but the next chapter in crypto will be written by crypto-enabled stocks: those with users, cash flow, management that leverages crypto tech to optimize business and accelerate higher compounding. Their performance will far surpass that of tokens.
Robinhood, Klarna, NuBank, Stripe, Revolut, Western Union, Visa, BlackRock — their portfolios will outperform a basket of tokens.
These companies have real price floors: cash flow, assets, customers. Tokens do not. When token valuations are driven to absurd multiples based on future income, the downside can be devastating.
Long-term bullish on crypto tech, cautious in choosing tokens, heavily invested in those corporate stocks that leverage crypto infrastructure to amplify advantages and achieve compound growth.
The Harsh Reality
All attempts to solve the token compound growth problem inadvertently confirm my view.
Decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs) trying to do real capital allocation, like MakerDAO buying government bonds, setting up sub-DAOs, appointing specialized teams, are gradually reshaping corporate governance models. The more a protocol seeks to achieve compound growth, the more it must resemble a corporation.
Tokenized stocks and digital asset bond tools cannot solve this problem either. They merely create a second claim on the same cash flow, competing with the underlying tokens. These tools cannot make protocols better at compound growth; they just redistribute returns from token holders who do not hold that tool to those who do.
Token burning is not stock buybacks. Ethereum’s burn mechanism is like a thermostat fixed at a certain temperature — unchanging; Apple’s stock buybacks are flexible decisions made by management based on market conditions. Smart capital allocation, adjusting strategies according to market situations, is the core of compound growth. Rigid rules cannot generate compounding; flexible decisions can.
And regulation? That’s actually the most worth exploring part. Today, tokens cannot compound because protocols cannot operate as companies: they cannot register as corporations, retain earnings, or make legally binding commitments to token holders. The GENIUS Act shows that the U.S. Congress can incorporate tokens into the financial system without stifling their development. When we have a framework allowing protocols to use corporate capital allocation tools, it will be the biggest catalyst in crypto history — far beyond Bitcoin spot ETFs.
Until then, smart capital will continue flowing into stocks, and the gap in compound growth between tokens and stocks will only widen each year.
This is not a bearish view on blockchain
Let me be clear: blockchain is an economic system with limitless potential. It will become the foundational infrastructure for digital payments and intelligent business. My company, Inversion, is developing a blockchain precisely because we believe in this.
The issue is not the technology itself but the economic model of tokens. Today’s blockchain networks merely transfer value, not accumulate and reinvest to achieve compound growth. But this will change: regulation will improve, governance will mature, some protocol will find a way to retain and reinvest value like a successful enterprise. When that day comes, tokens will essentially become stocks in all but name, and the engine of compounding will be officially activated.
I am not bearish on that future — I just have my own judgment on when it will arrive.
One day, blockchain networks will achieve value’s compound growth, and until then, I will choose to buy companies that leverage crypto technology to accelerate their own compound growth.
I may be wrong about timing — crypto is an adaptive system, and that’s one of its most valuable traits. But I don’t need perfect accuracy; I only need to see the big picture: long-term performance of compound-growth assets will ultimately surpass that of other assets.
And that is the true power of compounding. As Munger said: “The astonishing thing is that people like us, who simply try to avoid stupidity, gain such a huge long-term advantage over others who pursue brilliance.”
Crypto technology drastically reduces infrastructure costs, and wealth will ultimately flow to those who utilize these low-cost infrastructures to achieve compound growth.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
Cryptocurrencies without compound interest can't outperform stocks?
Long-term bullish on crypto technology, cautious in selecting tokens, heavily invested in companies that leverage crypto infrastructure to amplify advantages and achieve compound growth.
Article by: Santiago Roel Santos
Translation by: Luffy, Foresight News
While writing this article, the crypto market is experiencing a crash. Bitcoin hits the $60,000 mark, SOL falls back to the price levels during FTX bankruptcy asset liquidation, and Ethereum drops to $1,800. I won’t bother reiterating the long-term bearish arguments.
This article aims to explore a more fundamental question: why tokens cannot achieve compound growth.
Over the past few months, I have maintained a view: fundamentally, crypto assets are severely overvalued, and Metcalfe’s Law cannot justify current valuations, while the disconnect between industry real-world applications and asset prices may persist for years.
Imagine this scenario: “Dear liquidity providers, stablecoin trading volume has increased by 100 times, but our returns to you are only 1.3 times. Thank you for your trust and patience.”
What is the strongest opposition to all these objections? “You’re too pessimistic, you don’t understand the intrinsic value of tokens — this is a whole new paradigm.”
I am precisely very clear about the intrinsic value of tokens, and this is exactly where the core problem lies.
The Power of Compound Growth Engines
Berkshire Hathaway’s market cap is now about $1.1 trillion, not because Buffett’s timing is perfect, but because the company has the ability to grow via compounding.
Every year, Berkshire reinvests profits into new businesses, expands profit margins, acquires competitors, thereby increasing intrinsic value per share, and the stock price follows suit. This is an inevitable outcome because the underlying economic engine is continuously strengthening.
This is the core value of stocks. It represents ownership of a profit-reinvesting engine. After management earns profits, they allocate capital, plan growth, cut costs, buy back shares — each correct decision becomes a foundation for the next growth cycle, creating compounding.
$1 growing at 15% annually for 20 years will become $16.37; $1 at 0% interest over 20 years remains $1.
Stocks can turn $1 profit into $16 of value; tokens, on the other hand, can only turn $1 in fees into $1 in fees, with no appreciation.
Show Your Growth Engine
Let’s consider what happens when a private equity fund acquires a company with an annual free cash flow of $5 million:
Year 1: Achieves $5 million in free cash flow; management reinvests it into R&D, building stablecoin custody channels, and debt repayment — three key capital allocation decisions.
Year 2: Each decision yields returns; free cash flow increases to $5.75 million.
Year 3: The previous gains continue to compound, supporting new decisions; free cash flow reaches $6.6 million.
This is a business growing at 15% compound annually. Going from $5 million to $6.6 million isn’t due to market hype, but because each capital allocation decision empowers the next, layer by layer. Persisting for 20 years, $5 million can eventually grow to $82 million.
Now, consider a crypto protocol earning $5 million in annual fees:
Year 1: Earns $5 million in fees, distributed entirely to token stakers, funds flow out of the system.
Year 2: Possibly earns another $5 million in fees, assuming users return, and again distributes all, funds flow out again.
Year 3: The total earnings depend entirely on how many users participate in this “casino.”
There’s no compound growth here, because in Year 1 there’s no reinvestment, so no growth wheel in Year 3. Relying solely on subsidy programs is far from enough.
Token Design Is Built That Way
This is not accidental but a strategic design at the legal level.
Looking back at 2017-2019, the U.S. SEC conducted strict investigations into all assets that appeared to be securities. At that time, all lawyers advising crypto protocol teams gave the same advice: tokens must not look like stocks. They cannot grant holders cash flow rights, governance rights over core R&D entities, or retained earnings; they must be defined as utility assets, not investment products.
Thus, the entire crypto industry deliberately designed tokens to clearly distinguish them from stocks. No cash flow rights to avoid dividend-like appearances; no governance over core R&D entities to avoid shareholder rights; no retained earnings to avoid resembling corporate treasuries; staking rewards are defined as network participation returns, not investment income.
This strategy worked. Most tokens successfully avoided being classified as securities, but at the same time, they lost all potential for compound growth.
From the very beginning, this asset class was intentionally designed to be incapable of generating long-term wealth through compound growth.
Developers hold equity, you only hold “coupons”
Every leading crypto protocol is backed by a profit-oriented core development entity. These entities develop software, control front-end interfaces, own branding rights, and coordinate enterprise partnerships. And what do token holders get? Only governance voting rights and a floating claim on fee income.
This pattern is ubiquitous in the industry. The core R&D entity controls talent, intellectual property, branding, enterprise contracts, and strategic choices; token holders can only receive a floating “coupon” tied to network usage, and a “privilege” to vote on proposals increasingly ignored by the R&D entity.
It’s no wonder that when Circle acquires protocols like Axelar, the acquirer is buying equity in the core R&D entity, not the token. Because equity can compound, tokens cannot.
Lack of clear regulatory intent has led to this distorted industry outcome.
What Exactly Are You Holding?
Setting aside all market narratives and ignoring price volatility, what can token holders truly obtain?
Staking Ethereum yields about 3%-4%, with returns determined by network inflation mechanisms and dynamically adjusted based on staking rates: more stakers mean lower yields; fewer stakers mean higher yields.
This is essentially a floating interest coupon linked to protocol mechanisms, not stocks, but bonds.
Sure, Ethereum’s price might rise from $3,000 to $10,000, but junk bonds can also double in value when spreads narrow — that doesn’t make them stocks.
The key question is: what mechanism drives your cash flow growth?
Stock cash flow growth: management reinvests profits to achieve compound growth, with growth rate = return on capital × reinvestment rate. As a holder, you participate in a continuously expanding economic engine.
Token cash flow: entirely depends on network usage × fee rate × staking participation; what you get is just a coupon fluctuating with block space demand. There’s no reinvestment mechanism or engine for compound growth in the entire system.
The large price swings lead people to mistakenly think they hold stocks, but from an economic structure perspective, what they actually hold is a fixed-income product with 60%-80% annual volatility. It’s a two-headed beast.
Most tokens, after accounting for inflation dilution, yield only 1%-3% real return. No fixed-income investor would accept such a risk-return profile, but the high volatility of these assets always attracts wave after wave of buyers — a true reflection of the “greater fool” theory.
Timing Power Law, Not Compound Power Law
This is why tokens cannot achieve value accumulation and compound growth. The market is gradually realizing this; it’s not stupid, but shifting toward crypto-related stocks. First, digital asset government bonds, then more capital flows into companies that leverage crypto tech to reduce costs, increase revenue, and realize compound growth.
Wealth creation in crypto follows a timing power law: those who make huge gains buy early and sell at the right time. My own portfolio also follows this pattern — crypto assets are called “liquidity venture capital” for a reason.
In stocks, wealth creation follows a compound power law: Buffett didn’t buy Coca-Cola to flip it quickly but held for 35 years, letting compound growth work.
In crypto, time is your enemy: holding too long erodes returns. High inflation mechanisms, low liquidity, high fully-diluted valuations, and a market with excess block space due to insufficient demand are key reasons. Ultra-liquid assets are among the few exceptions.
In stocks, time is your ally: the longer you hold assets with compound growth, the greater the returns driven by mathematical laws.
Crypto rewards traders; stocks reward holders. In reality, far more people get rich holding stocks than by trading.
I keep recalculating these data because every liquidity provider asks: “Why not just buy Ethereum directly?”
Let’s compare the trajectory of a compound-growth stock — Darden, Constellation Software, Berkshire — with Ethereum: the curve of a compound-growth stock steadily climbs upward and to the right because its underlying economic engine grows stronger each year; Ethereum’s price swings wildly, cycling up and down, and the total accumulated return depends entirely on your entry and exit timing.
Perhaps their final returns are similar, but holding stocks allows you to sleep peacefully at night, while holding tokens requires you to be a market prophet. “Long-term holding beats timing,” everyone understands this, but the real challenge is sticking to it. Stocks make long-term holding easier: cash flows support stock prices, dividends give patience, buybacks continue to compound during your holding period. Crypto makes long-term holding extremely difficult: fee income dries up, narratives shift, you have no fallback, no price floor, no stable coupon, only faith.
I would rather be a holder than a prophet.
Investment Strategy
If tokens cannot compound, and compounding is the core way to create wealth, then the conclusion is obvious.
The internet created trillions of dollars in value — where does that value ultimately flow? Not to TCP/IP, HTTP, SMTP protocols. They are public goods, hugely valuable, but cannot generate any returns for investors at the protocol layer.
Value ultimately flows to companies like Amazon, Google, Meta, Apple. They build businesses on top of protocols and achieve compound growth.
The crypto industry is repeating this pattern.
Stablecoins are gradually becoming the TCP/IP of the monetary world — highly practical, with high adoption rates, but whether the protocol itself can capture matching value remains uncertain. USDT is backed by a company with equity, not just a protocol, which offers important insights.
Those companies that integrate stablecoin infrastructure into their operations, reduce payment friction, optimize working capital, and cut foreign exchange costs are the true compound-growth entities. For example, a CFO switching cross-border payments to a stablecoin channel saving $3 million annually can reinvest that savings into sales, R&D, or debt repayment, and that $3 million will continue to compound. The protocol enabling this transaction only earns a fee, with no compounding.
The “Fat Protocol” theory suggests crypto protocols capture more value than application layers. But after seven years, public chains account for about 90% of the total crypto market cap, yet their fee share has plummeted from 60% to 12%; application layers contribute about 73% of fees but less than 10% of valuation. Markets are always efficient — these data say it all.
Today, the market still clings to the “Fat Protocol” narrative, but the next chapter in crypto will be written by crypto-enabled stocks: those with users, cash flow, management that leverages crypto tech to optimize business and accelerate higher compounding. Their performance will far surpass that of tokens.
Robinhood, Klarna, NuBank, Stripe, Revolut, Western Union, Visa, BlackRock — their portfolios will outperform a basket of tokens.
These companies have real price floors: cash flow, assets, customers. Tokens do not. When token valuations are driven to absurd multiples based on future income, the downside can be devastating.
Long-term bullish on crypto tech, cautious in choosing tokens, heavily invested in those corporate stocks that leverage crypto infrastructure to amplify advantages and achieve compound growth.
The Harsh Reality
All attempts to solve the token compound growth problem inadvertently confirm my view.
Decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs) trying to do real capital allocation, like MakerDAO buying government bonds, setting up sub-DAOs, appointing specialized teams, are gradually reshaping corporate governance models. The more a protocol seeks to achieve compound growth, the more it must resemble a corporation.
Tokenized stocks and digital asset bond tools cannot solve this problem either. They merely create a second claim on the same cash flow, competing with the underlying tokens. These tools cannot make protocols better at compound growth; they just redistribute returns from token holders who do not hold that tool to those who do.
Token burning is not stock buybacks. Ethereum’s burn mechanism is like a thermostat fixed at a certain temperature — unchanging; Apple’s stock buybacks are flexible decisions made by management based on market conditions. Smart capital allocation, adjusting strategies according to market situations, is the core of compound growth. Rigid rules cannot generate compounding; flexible decisions can.
And regulation? That’s actually the most worth exploring part. Today, tokens cannot compound because protocols cannot operate as companies: they cannot register as corporations, retain earnings, or make legally binding commitments to token holders. The GENIUS Act shows that the U.S. Congress can incorporate tokens into the financial system without stifling their development. When we have a framework allowing protocols to use corporate capital allocation tools, it will be the biggest catalyst in crypto history — far beyond Bitcoin spot ETFs.
Until then, smart capital will continue flowing into stocks, and the gap in compound growth between tokens and stocks will only widen each year.
This is not a bearish view on blockchain
Let me be clear: blockchain is an economic system with limitless potential. It will become the foundational infrastructure for digital payments and intelligent business. My company, Inversion, is developing a blockchain precisely because we believe in this.
The issue is not the technology itself but the economic model of tokens. Today’s blockchain networks merely transfer value, not accumulate and reinvest to achieve compound growth. But this will change: regulation will improve, governance will mature, some protocol will find a way to retain and reinvest value like a successful enterprise. When that day comes, tokens will essentially become stocks in all but name, and the engine of compounding will be officially activated.
I am not bearish on that future — I just have my own judgment on when it will arrive.
One day, blockchain networks will achieve value’s compound growth, and until then, I will choose to buy companies that leverage crypto technology to accelerate their own compound growth.
I may be wrong about timing — crypto is an adaptive system, and that’s one of its most valuable traits. But I don’t need perfect accuracy; I only need to see the big picture: long-term performance of compound-growth assets will ultimately surpass that of other assets.
And that is the true power of compounding. As Munger said: “The astonishing thing is that people like us, who simply try to avoid stupidity, gain such a huge long-term advantage over others who pursue brilliance.”
Crypto technology drastically reduces infrastructure costs, and wealth will ultimately flow to those who utilize these low-cost infrastructures to achieve compound growth.