Editor's Note: This article uses a "year-by-year projection" approach to predict the potential structural changes in the cryptocurrency industry from 2026 to 2029.
Rather than continuing to discuss narratives of altcoins, ecosystems of specific public blockchains, or whether AI x Crypto will take off, the author is more concerned with a more fundamental question: When cryptocurrency is no longer just an asset class, but begins to enable private asset trading, on-chain settlement, and serve as traditional financial back-end infrastructure, where will the real value of this industry flow?
The core thesis of the article is that the main theme of the crypto market in the coming years will shift from "token narratives" to "real-world asset access." In 2026, pre-IPO perpetual contracts for companies like SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic on platforms like Hyperliquid might become the entry point for the market to chase high-quality private assets. Most directions in AI x Crypto will be disproven, and the only cross-over scenario that truly takes off might be prediction markets. By 2027, public blockchain foundations will be forced to reposition themselves between casino-style retail trading and institutional-grade compliant infrastructure. Stablecoins, tokenized private credit, and fund shares will continue to grow, but the pace will be constrained by political and regulatory variables.
The real turning point may come after 2028. The author believes that as accredited investor thresholds are relaxed and secondary markets for private securities gradually open up, real equity in private companies will begin to replace unanchored synthetic perpetuals as the core asset of the new bull run. In other words, the boom in pre-IPO perpetual contracts is not the endgame but a substitute solution for the market while legitimate channels for private assets are absent. Once real equity can be traded more broadly, synthetic assets will transition from being the protagonist to a supplementary role.
By 2029, the cryptocurrency industry might become more "boring" but also more important: stablecoins and on-chain settlement become part of the traditional financial back-end, with ordinary users no longer necessarily caring whether the underlying infrastructure runs on a public chain. Truly valuable tokens must correspond to real cash flows, enforceable rights, or clear value capture mechanisms. Those tokens without underlying assets, no claim rights, and no closed-loop revenue will no longer experience a prolonged liquidation; instead, they will simply lose their relevance for trading.
The most noteworthy aspect of this article is not whether it accurately predicts each year, but that it proposes a clear test variable: The key to the next crypto bull run might not be a technical bottleneck, but a legal channel. If, by the end of 2028, retail demand for private companies still can only be expressed through offshore synthetic perpetuals and wrapped products, then the author's judgment needs to be reassessed. But if private assets truly begin to enter the broader market in a compliant manner, the core narrative of the crypto industry will be rewritten accordingly.
Below is the original text:
You are sitting in front of the biggest transformation in crypto history. If you still want to remain in this industry, you must carefully see what is happening now.
This industry now has three core questions:
What makes a token valuable?
How do we translate different technological frontiers onto the blockchain?
What happens when crypto is no longer a class of assets but becomes the infrastructure of traditional finance?
I could discuss each question abstractly. Many people do this every day, and these debates never reach a conclusion.
So I want to take a different approach. I will write down what I think will actually happen in this industry from now until 2029, by timeframe. I will give names, numbers, and dates, making it specific enough for you to come back in three years and check if I was right. This is just one of many possible futures, and parts of it will certainly be wrong. But vague judgments about the future cannot be falsified, and unfalsifiable judgments have no value. Compared to being vague and safe, I'd rather be specific and wrong.
This prediction comes from my position: I am at the intersection of crypto entrepreneurship, regulation, and venture capital, speaking with alternative asset managers and capital allocators every week. This certainly doesn't mean I am necessarily correct, but it means my judgment is priced under real-world constraints.
Mid-2026: The Only Good Assets Are Not Tokens
Time arrives at mid-2026. Before everyone reaches consensus on "how much a token should really be worth," the pre-IPO perpetual contract market has already found product-market fit first.
It started with Hyperliquid. SpaceX's pre-IPO perpetual contracts, initially mocked due to a major Ventuals liquidation manipulation event, later became the most watched price signal in both private and public markets. By July, banks and hedge funds began referencing them to value their private holdings, and consumer-facing apps like Robinhood used them to calibrate post-IPO pricing. In the weeks before every major listing, these perpetual contracts converged with embarrassingly accurate precision to the opening price—embarrassing not for the market, but for the underwriters who charge seven-figure fees yet end up with the same number. OpenAI and Anthropic perpetuals attracted even larger open interest. For a brief period, a crypto-native exchange became the place closest to a real-time price for the world's most important private companies.
Meanwhile, retail investors ask a more basic question: Why is there anything else worth trading on-chain? Over the past eighteen months, the altcoin market has been bleeding out, with founders and funds exiting via DAT and TWAP sell-offs, while $HYPE, the only token with an effective value capture flywheel, outperformed everything. The market has proposed over a dozen value capture mechanisms, but most haven't truly taken off because they share the same flaw: these mechanisms are attached to companies with no value. This industry solved "how can a token capture value" first, but hasn't yet obtained any assets whose value is worth capturing.
This inversion is the quiet engine behind the pre-IPO market boom. The demand was never for the perpetual contracts themselves, but for quality assets. And in mid-2026, the only quality assets accessible on-chain are the synthetic equity of companies that have nothing to do with crypto.
End of 2026: AI Doesn't Need Crypto
Anthropic and OpenAI reach technological escape velocity, the battle of foundational models begins pricing AGI earlier into the market. One consequence that follows is: everyone working in this field, except the core foundational model companies, starts bleeding out. Capital begins pricing AGI as something on a single company's balance sheet, not as a capability that will be commoditized and benefit everyone around it.
In this environment, AI × Crypto dies quietly. Not because the proposition was refuted, but because no one had the time to refute it. The x402 payment rail goes live but finds no payers; the Agent economy supposedly requiring on-chain currency doesn't arrive at scale; the few Agents that do exist, like all software before them, settle in dollars via APIs. The most honest sentiment in VC circles at this point is: AI does not need crypto, and VCs finally stop pretending it does.
The only AI × Crypto product that has actually found product-market fit so far is prediction markets. Predictions on foundational models reach escape velocity because they become the most accurate financial instrument for expressing the question "who has the strongest model a month from now?"—a question that alone moves the largest pools of capital.
Away from the price action, some less exciting things are happening. The CLARITY Act, passed by the Senate in mid-2026, was initially viewed by most traders as "irrelevant" because the market didn't immediately rally. But by the end of 2026, tokenization projects are accelerating. Large asset managers are quietly moving from pilots to production, because "quiet" is exactly what their compliance departments are paid for: money market funds, private credit, and the unglamorous but important middle layers of balance sheets. They don't trade, have no price charts, and no KOLs on CT passionately retweeting a transfer agent filing.
By the end of 2026, the crypto industry forms two economies that hardly acknowledge each other. One is loud, responsible for pricing the AI race; the other is quiet, being absorbed into the financial system one filing at a time. Almost everyone is watching the first one.
Early 2027: Foundations Choose Sides
General-purpose public chains can no longer sustain ambiguity.
For years, every major foundation has been telling two stories simultaneously: consumer adoption on stage, institutional readiness in the data room. These two stories never had to meet face to face before. But by early 2027, they meet.
The consumer narrative is highly concentrated at the trading layer: the only retail products that have truly found demand concentrate volume into a handful of venues. Meanwhile, the institutional narrative is the only story truly tied to paying customers. So, one by one, foundations begin forming clear positions, most moving in the same direction: enterprise sales teams, compliance support, full-network compliance SDKs for tokenized transfer agents and broker-dealer licenses, Wall Street relationships, and privacy features.
Each pivot is read by media and CT in the same way: this is a choice—institutions over consumers, serious clients over the casino.
But inside the foundations, almost no one actually believes this framing. They are, in fact, doubling down on consumer crypto from a different angle. The accredited investor threshold has been expanding for years, the qualifying population continuously growing. This means the "institutional products" for which foundations are building rails are actually just consumer products with a slight delay, for consumers who are just not called that yet. The people laying the tracks know this; they just don't write it into the announcements. Teams building compliance infrastructure talk about banks because banks are the ones paying now.
But that quiet economy from late 2026 now possesses something it never had before: future retail customers. The two economies that hardly acknowledged each other now share a thin membrane, and that membrane is the accredited investor verification.
Mid to Late 2027: Triple Ceilings
A new generation of companies makes the private market manic again. Bio × AI, Physical AI, humanoid robots—funding rounds are oversubscribed, valuations go vertical, and each company is still years away from a true public listing. Perpetual platforms list them within weeks; companies with almost no revenue set records in synthetic open interest. The pattern of 2026 repeats with higher stakes: the world's most desirable assets are all in private markets, and the only version you can touch carries an 8-hour funding rate.
The real assets exist now and grow as private markets always have: compounding quarter over quarter through verified channels, invisible in a feed that only reacts to vertical lines. The gap between their growth rate and that of the perpetuals has a clear cause: private securities cannot be generally solicited. Therefore, the only distribution engine the crypto industry has ever truly mastered—someone posts a chart, a crowd follows—cannot legally touch this asset class yet. Meanwhile, perpetuals themselves have their own ceiling, and it's structural: a perpetual needs a catalyst close enough to be priced, which confines synthetic assets to late-stage companies nearing a listing. Earlier-stage assets, like mid-stage rounds, Bio × AI and robotics companies, names years away from an exit, have no viable synthetic expression. For most of the private market, regulated ownership is not a slower alternative; it is the only tool that can exist. It's just not allowed to introduce itself publicly.
Stablecoins hit a different kind of ceiling. Supply continues to rise slowly, never stopping, but expansion plans quietly contract. Midterm elections changed committee compositions, the 2028 presidential field is taking shape, and some of its loudest voices are making opposition to private dollar issuance a campaign theme. The laws passed in 2025 and 2026 still stand, but laws are enforced by governments. Every bank treasury head modeling a decade-long settlement system must now price in scenarios where the next administration might be hostile. No one cancels projects. They just extend timelines, shrink pilots, and wait for November 2028. The speed at which dollars go on-chain is exactly the speed of political certainty; and in mid-2027, political certainty is low.
The same caution spreads to other parts of the quiet economy. Tokenized private credit and fund shares continue to launch, and continue landing in the same place: production-grade, compliance-approved, deliberately kept small, because no one wants to be a case study in a Senate hearing next year. The pattern across all three threads is identical, though for different reasons: the products work, demand is proven, but the accelerator is held by something the industry cannot control.
Viewed from any chart outside the crypto industry, 2027 is a strong year. It's just that this industry spent a decade training itself to read any linear growth as failure.
2028: Permission Is No Longer Scarce
From here, the resolution drops. The near-term parts of this article predicted by quarter; the following parts predict by year, with correspondingly wider error bars. A clear assumption here: this scenario assumes a Democratic candidate wins in November 2028. Under a different outcome, the timing of subsequent events changes, but the structure largely remains.
The casino completes its deflation, and almost no one marks the exact date. The extraction machine has become so efficient it cannot sustain itself: every storm of new liquidity in 2026 and 2027 is smaller than the last, drained faster by fewer, more concentrated players. There is no identifiable crash. Memecoin frenzies still occur, charts still go vertical in an afternoon, but at some point in the first half of 2028, the casino quietly ceases to be the industry's center of gravity. Its volume becomes a statistic, not a culture. Some traders migrate to prediction markets, which inherit that energy; some remain in the shrinking casino pool; and a surprising number do something over the past year that no one in 2026 could have predicted: pass accredited investor verification.
The fading of political fear is a re-pricing that unfolds throughout the year, just as its arrival did. Probable candidates take industry money and say the same sentence in different accents: regulate, don't ban. Participants who saw the last administration as an extraction window face investigations, and the industry slowly realizes that cleanup itself is a bullish signal, not bearish: a government that can distinguish between extraction and infrastructure is the very premise for infrastructure to be safely financed. Bank treasury heads who shrunk pilots in 2027 begin quietly expanding them again before November. By the time the result is official, most of the fear premium is gone.
The real lesson of the year comes from a market everyone can see. In early 2028, on a major trading venue, a position large enough to move the mark price begins unwinding in the most crowded pre-IPO perpetual. The cascade this structure has been telegraphing since Ventuals finally arrives at scale. Billions in open interest are wiped out in hours, positions auto-deleveraged, losses socialized, winners' payouts discounted. Post-mortems never agree on whether it was manipulation or accident, and that ambiguity is itself the conclusion: in a market with no anchor, there is no real price to deviate from, so manipulation cannot even be defined, let alone proven. Perpetuals for public stocks are constrained by their underlying spot market. But pre-IPO perpetuals have nothing underneath. The real stock does exist and trades quietly in regulated venues but cannot be generally distributed or cited at scale, so every mark price is the venue's guess, and guesses can be moved. That cascade wasn't a synthetic market failure; it was a synthetic market functioning exactly as designed in the absence of a real market.
For a decade, the ban on general solicitation was defended as investor protection. What the ruins prove is: it kept people away from the executable version of the trade and left them alone with the leveraged, unanchored one. The line that really mattered was never synthetic vs. real, but executable vs. non-executable.
The post-mortem relief, when it comes, looks less like a reform and more like market plumbing: regulatory guidance allows general solicitation for private security resales—secondary market, not primary fundraising—targeting the verified and continuously expanding accredited investor pool. The logic is almost boring: synthetic markets need an anchor, and the cheapest anchor is a real market that exists and people are allowed to know exists. A ninety-year-old speech rule is narrowed one afternoon as a derivatives fix.
The first week plays like a memecoin launch replay, except the charts correspond to real companies. Resale listings are posted, screenshotted, spread, and for the first time in this asset class's history, legally. The discourse splits on contact: half the timeline calls it a new primitive, the other half questions whether retail just became VC's exit liquidity. The latter half's intuition is right but wrong on the era—the question was valid when the assets were just tokens attached to nothing. But now, these are equity in real companies, and the perpetual market spent two years proving everyone wants them. The capital flows ignited first are exactly where the synthetic market telegraphed: the late-stage companies everyone knows, then—because ownership has no funding rate and needs no catalyst—outward to the mid-stage frontier companies perpetuals could never touch. Perpetuals don't die; they become a late-stage annex in a market that no longer needs them to carry the full function.
By December, the industry gets its bull run, and what drives it is the oldest primitive in finance: something that is now finally allowed to introduce itself.
2029: The Market Is the Only Thing Still Visible
The first full year of this bull run no longer resembles previous cycles, and that difference is the point. The assets going vertical are real companies that actually build real things and are actually useful to humans. The new primitive ordinary people trade is private companies: biotech companies in Phase III trials, robotics companies whose demos everyone has seen, AI labs whose perpetuals they traded in 2026 and whose stock they can finally actually hold. The decade-long gradual expansion of the accredited investor regime quietly created a retail class that can buy assets only institutions could touch five years ago, most of whom never think of these things as "crypto."
Token systems split along the line this article opened with. Chains that become the settlement and issuance infrastructure for the new markets capture real cash flows, their tokens trading like claims on those flows. Everything else faces a market that has become brutally literal: a token with no enforceable right and no effective value capture flywheel won't bleed out over eighteen months anymore—it won't trade at all. The 2026 value capture debate wasn't won by some mechanism. It was obsoleted directly by the arrival of a class of assets that never needed that debate.
Stablecoins in 2029 do what they do every year in this scenario: compound meaningfully but without a hockey-stick explosion. By year-end, supply roughly doubles from mid-2027—call it 20% sustained annual growth. The ceiling preventing it from exceeding that speed is not a market failure but a sustained policy choice by both parties in different vocabulary: private dollar issuance will grow at a pace that remains useful but does not compete with the sovereign balance sheet. Dollars go on-chain at the speed of political certainty, and by 2029, that certainty is medium and permanent.
The casino still exists. It operates in the corners left after its own deflation, occasionally sparking storms, its importance roughly equivalent to any other corner of the entertainment economy. Its former members are dispersed across prediction markets, the new secondary market, and—this is the part no one in 2026 predicted—accredited investor application forms.
And the third question of this article, about crypto becoming traditional finance infrastructure, is answered the only way it could be: it becomes a question that can no longer be asked. No event occurs. Settlement exists somewhere—dedicated rails, public chains, or some combination no one outside the operations team can diagram—ordinary participants neither know nor care, just as no one knows which clearinghouse stands behind their brokerage account. The absorption process that started with filings at the end of 2026 completes by disappearing from view. Infrastructure wins by becoming boring. What remains visible is the one thing this industry has actually been building beneath every cycle where it pretended to be doing something else: a market.
So, the three questions at the start of this article can be answered the way this scenario gives.
What makes a token valuable? The answer it was always destined to be: an enforceable claim on something real, now enforced by a market ruthless enough to delete any asset with no claim.
How are technological frontiers translated onto the blockchain? Through private markets. Frontier companies never needed tokens; they needed trading venues. And once those venues can speak publicly, the frontier itself lists.
What happens when crypto becomes traditional finance infrastructure? Nothing. It gets abstracted away, and the question stops being asked.
Parts of this will certainly be wrong. That was the bargain made at the start. The entire article's thesis would be pierced by one observation: If by the end of 2028, retail demand for private companies still hasn't found a legal channel—no regulatory relief, no expanded access, offshore synthetic perpetuals and wrapped products still carry the main flows—then this article's core judgment—that the bottleneck is legal, not technical—is wrong, and you should discount everything built on it.
Watch this one variable. The rest, score in 2029.
I would rather be specifically wrong than vaguely right.
This article's style is inspired by "AI 2027".





