Author: Luke
Compiled by: Saoirse, Foresight News
You are standing on the eve of the largest transformation in the history of cryptocurrency. To continue operating in this industry, you must pay close attention to what is happening right now.
Currently, the entire industry faces three core issues:
- What ultimately determines the value of a token?
- How can cutting-edge technologies be effectively integrated into the blockchain ecosystem?
- What will happen to the market when cryptocurrencies are no longer a separate asset class but become the underlying infrastructure of traditional finance?
I could theoretically analyze these three questions, as countless people do daily. However, theoretical discussion can never lead to definitive conclusions. Therefore, I intend to adopt a different approach: outline the real changes the industry will undergo from now until 2029 in stages. The text will specify specific entities, data, and timelines, making the content concrete enough for verification three years later. This is just one of many possible futures, and some inferences will inevitably be wrong. But vague, ambiguous predictions about the future cannot be falsified, and unfalsifiable viewpoints are worthless. I would rather give a clear, albeit potentially incorrect, judgment than offer vague platitudes that can never be proven wrong.
The perspective of this prediction stems from my work environment: I have long worked at the intersection of crypto startups, industry regulation, and venture capital, having deep conversations with alternative asset managers and capital allocators weekly. This doesn't mean my judgments are necessarily correct, but my deductions fully account for various constraints in the real world.
Mid-2026: Quality Assets Are No Longer Various Tokens
By mid-2026, before the market has unified standards for token valuation, the market for perpetual contracts on privately held companies has already found product-market fit.
This change began on the Hyperliquid platform. The privately held SpaceX perpetual contract it launched was initially criticized due to price manipulation by Ventuals exploiting forced liquidations. Later, however, it became the primary price reference for both primary and secondary markets. By July, major banks and hedge funds will reference this contract to price their private holdings. Retail trading apps like Robinhood will also use it to predict post-IPO opening prices. In the weeks before a major company goes public, the price of this perpetual contract will accurately align with the final opening price, to a degree that embarrasses underwriting teams charging seven-figure fees. The open interest for OpenAI and Anthropic perpetual contracts will reach record highs. For a period, this native crypto exchange became the world's most reliable channel for obtaining real-time valuations of top unlisted companies.
Simultaneously, a fundamental question arises among ordinary traders: What justifies continued trading for all other tokens on-chain? The altcoin market will have been in a bearish trend for 18 consecutive months, with project founding teams and investors steadily exiting through large-scale OTC deals and algorithmic selling. In contrast, $HYPE, the only token to establish a complete value capture loop, outperforms all other assets. The industry proposed over a dozen token value capture mechanisms, but most failed to form a positive feedback loop, rooted in the fact that the projects they were attached to held no asset value themselves. The industry ironically solved the technical problem of how tokens can capture value before finding real assets worthy of carrying that value.
This cart-before-the-horse industry reality is the underlying driver behind the private perpetual contract frenzy. What the market truly craves is not the perpetual contract product itself, but quality assets. And by mid-2026, the only quality asset tradable on-chain is the synthetic yield certificate of real-world companies unrelated to crypto.
Late 2026: The AI Sector Doesn't Need Cryptocurrency
Anthropic and OpenAI achieve technological breakthroughs, intensifying competition in the foundational large model space, leading the market to price in Artificial General Intelligence (AGI). A chain reaction follows: capital continuously flows out from non-top-tier foundational model companies. Capital begins to view AGI as a core asset held on corporate balance sheets, not as a standardized tool for widespread industry adoption.
In this environment, the "AI + Crypto" narrative quietly fades into obscurity. It's not that the logic is disproven, but the industry has no time to debate it. The x402 payment protocol officially launches but has no paying users; the envisioned on-chain agent economy fails to materialize at scale; existing agents all settle via API in USD, no different from the traditional software model. A consensus forms among VCs: the AI industry itself does not need cryptocurrency as a foundation, and investors stop forcefully promoting this narrative.
Currently, the only "AI + Crypto" product with proven product-market fit is prediction markets. Trading volumes around the performance of major foundational models grow rapidly, becoming the most precise financial tool for betting on the core variable driving massive capital flows: which company will have the best-performing model next month.
Beyond the trading noise, another low-key transformation is underway: when the CLARITY Act passed the Senate in mid-2026, most traders thought it irrelevant, and the market saw no rally. But by year's end, various asset tokenization projects accelerate. Large asset managers transition from pilot phases to full-scale operations, keeping it low-key—compliance departments' core job is to avoid publicity. Tokenization focuses on the mundane middle of balance sheets: money market funds, private credit. These assets have no KOLs hyping them on social media, no price charts to speculate on.
By late 2026, the crypto industry splits into two almost separate economies: one is noisy and vibrant, profiting from betting on AI market trends; the other is silent and low-key, gradually absorbed by the traditional financial system through compliance filings. Most industry eyes are fixed on the former.
Early 2027: Major Foundation Roadmaps Become Clear
General-purpose blockchains can no longer be all things to all people, maintaining ambiguous positioning.
For years, major foundations have told two completely separate narratives: publicly preaching a vision of mass adoption for ordinary users, while privately pitching institutional services to firms during meetings. These two stories never intersected. By early 2027, the contradiction between the two development paths becomes fully apparent.
The retail-facing sector is highly concentrated; the only retail products with real user demand see all volume aggregated on a few trading platforms. The institutional business is the only sector currently bringing stable, paying customers. Foundations successively finalize their core development directions, with a highly unified choice: build enterprise sales teams, provide compliance services, launch universal, compliant development toolkits for tokenized asset transfers and broker-dealer licensing, expand Wall Street partnerships, and enhance private transaction features.
Media and crypto social platforms interpret each strategic pivot as a trade-off: prioritize institutions over retail, choose serious finance over speculative casino attributes.
But insiders at the foundations don't see it that way. Teams actually double down on crypto services for ordinary users, just with a different implementation logic. Accredited investor qualification thresholds have been gradually lowered for years, expanding the eligible pool. The institutional infrastructure the foundations build will soon be opened to users not currently classified as "accredited investors." Infrastructure teams know this but won't announce it publicly. They only talk about bank clients externally because banks are the current paying customers.
And the low-key institutional market formed in late 2026 receives unprecedented new demand: a massive wave of future ordinary, compliant investors. The previously separate economies are finally connected by the bridge of "accredited investor verification."
Mid-to-Late 2027: Three Growth Ceilings
A new generation of tech startups revives the private market: AI-bio convergence, embodied AI, and humanoid robotics sectors are all oversubscribed, valuations skyrocket, but IPOs are still years away. Perpetual contract platforms list corresponding synthetic contracts within weeks, with open interest for these low-revenue companies repeatedly breaking records. The 2026 market pattern repeats, with even larger capital: the world's most sought-after quality assets are concentrated in the private primary market. The only corresponding assets users can trade on-chain are synthetic perpetual contracts settling funding rates every 8 hours.
But three markets hit their respective growth ceilings, constraining industry expansion:
Private Perpetual Contract Ceiling: Real private assets grow steadily through traditional channels, compounding quarterly, invisible on crypto social platforms fixated on explosive gains. Perpetual contract growth lags far behind real private assets, primarily limited by the prohibition against general solicitation for private securities. Crypto's most potent traffic model—flaunting gains to attract retail—is legally inapplicable. Additionally, perpetual contracts have a structural flaw: they need near-IPO events as price catalysts, covering only later-stage mature companies. Mid-stage startups like bio-AI or humanoid robots, far from exit paths, cannot have corresponding synthetic contracts. For most primary market assets, the regulated, real ownership channel isn't the second-best choice; it's the only compliant, viable trading instrument, but the law forbids public promotion.
Stablecoin Ceiling: Stablecoin circulating supply continues to grow steadily, never stopping expansion, but institutions quietly scale back their growth plans. Midterm elections shift committee power in Congress, 2028 presidential candidate lists take shape, and several frontrunners publicly oppose private dollar token issuance. Legislation passed in 2025 and 2026 isn't repealed, but enforcement authority belongs to the next administration. Bank treasurers crafting ten-year settlement plans must incorporate scenarios where the next government tightens regulations. The industry won't halt stablecoin projects entirely but will extend timelines and reduce pilot scales, with everyone watching the November 2028 election results. On-chain dollar velocity is entirely tethered to policy uncertainty, which is high by mid-2027.
Asset Tokenization Ceiling: This conservative sentiment spreads across the institutional crypto market. Tokenized private credit and fund share products continue to launch, all compliant, but institutions deliberately control project scale—no one wants to be the negative example at next year's Senate hearing.
The commonality across these three sectors is clear: the product logic is sound, market demand is validated, but external policy forces tightly constrain growth speed. Setting aside crypto's own boom-bust cycle standards, 2027 is actually a year of steady industry growth, but the crypto industry has been conditioned for a decade to view only vertical rallies as success.
2028: Compliance Access Ceases to Be Scarce
(From here on, prediction granularity decreases: prior predictions were quarterly; post-2028, the forecast is annual, and error margins widen accordingly. This article explicitly assumes a core premise: the Democratic candidate wins the November 2028 election. If the opposite occurs, the timing of events will shift, but the overall development framework remains unchanged.)
The speculative casino aspect of crypto gradually fades, with almost no one pinpointing the exact inflection point. The market's capital extraction mechanism becomes too efficient; each wave of new liquidity from 2026-2027 is smaller than the last and extracted faster by a few top players. There's no defining crash; meme coin frenzies still occur intermittently, with one-day spikes. But at some point in the first half of 2028, speculation ceases to be the industry's core focus. Trading volume persists as statistics, no longer dictating ecosystem culture. Some traders shift to prediction markets riding hype waves; some remain in the shrinking speculative segment; and a significant number accomplish something no one predicted in 2026—they obtain accredited investor status over the past year.
Policy-related panic is gradually priced in by the market throughout the year. Leading candidates from both parties accept industry donations, differing only in rhetoric, unified on core stance: the industry needs regulation, not an outright ban. Operators who treated the previous administration's leniency as a harvesting window face investigations. The industry slowly realizes regulatory cleanup is a bullish signal: the government distinguishes between predatory schemes and financial infrastructure, allowing capital to confidently flow into the latter. Bank treasurers who scaled back pilots in 2027 quietly resume expansion plans before the election; by the time results are in, most policy risk premium is already priced out.
The year's most profound lesson comes from the market everyone watches: early in the year, a large position capable of moving markets on a top exchange simultaneously unwinds across several popular private perpetual contracts. The systemic liquidation risk feared since the Ventuals manipulation event materializes fully. Within hours, billions in open interest are wiped out, automatic deleveraging triggers, losses are socialized, and profitable positions see gains severely curtailed. Post-mortem analysis cannot definitively label it malicious manipulation or a market accident—this ambiguity is the core takeaway. Markets lacking an underlying spot anchor have no fair benchmark price; "market manipulation" cannot even be defined, let alone proven. Public company perpetuals have spot price constraints, but private ones have no underlying anchor. Real private shares do have compliant trading channels, but large-scale public promotion and price discovery are prohibited. Each perpetual's price is merely the platform's estimate, with ample room for human intervention. This cascade wasn't a failure of the synthetic contract market itself but the inevitable outcome of market mechanics operating without real asset backing.
For a decade, the ban on general solicitation for private securities has been packaged as investor protection. This market crash proves: the rule merely bars ordinary investors from legally protected trading channels, funneling them instead into highly leveraged, anchorless synthetic markets. The real dividing line is not synthetic vs. real assets, but whether trading rights are legally enforceable.
Post-crash, new regulations emerge, less a reform than a refinement of financial plumbing: regulators issue guidance allowing public promotion of secondary market transfers of private securities (limited to secondary shares, not primary fundraising) to verified accredited investors, a pool that has been expanding for years. The logic is straightforward: synthetic markets need a price anchor; the lowest-cost solution is to open up public liquidity channels for real private assets. A ninety-year-old advertising restriction is substantially relaxed just to improve derivative markets.
The first week under the new rules sees hype akin to a meme coin launch, except the asset is equity in real companies. Listing private secondary shares, screenshotting, community promotion—all legalized for the first time in this asset class's history. Social media opinion splits: half the industry sees a new foundational financial tool; the other half fears retail becoming exit liquidity for VCs. The latter intuition is correct but lags the times: the concern held when assets were vaporware tokens; but now the traded assets are real company cash flow rights the entire market craved, as proven by the perpetual market over two years.
Capital first floods into late-stage mature companies already validated by perpetuals; and because real ownership has no funding rate or IPO timing constraints, capital further flows into mid-stage startups that perpetuals couldn't cover. Perpetuals don't die but transform into a supplementary sector for late-stage trading, no longer monopolizing core market attention.
By December, the industry enters a new bull market, fueled by finance's oldest underlying asset, finally with a legal channel for circulation.
2029: The Market Becomes the Industry's Sole Core Narrative
The first full year of this bull cycle unfolds completely differently from past crypto bull runs, and this difference is its core value. Assets with sustained upward momentum are all tech startups with real operations creating tangible societal value. The new foundational asset class for ordinary users is private company equity: biotech firms completing clinical trials, humanoid robot companies with live demos, the AI labs whose perpetuals people traded in 2026—now users can directly hold real company shares.
A decade of gradual lowering of accredited investor thresholds cultivates a new retail base. Assets accessible only to institutions five years ago are now tradable by ordinary compliant investors, with most not even categorizing it as "crypto investing."
The token sector diverges definitively along the lines of the opening core question: blockchains that successfully transition into infrastructure for new market issuance and settlement capture real business cash flows; their platform tokens become cash flow yield certificates. All other tokens face an extremely harsh market rule: tokens lacking legally enforceable cash flow rights or a complete value capture loop won't bleed slowly for 18 months as in 2026—they will simply lose all trading liquidity entirely. The industry-wide debate over token value capture mechanisms in 2026 doesn't see one model win; the advent of liquid private real assets renders the debate obsolete.
Stablecoins continue their cycle-long trend: steady, compounding growth, no explosive spikes. By late 2029, circulating supply roughly doubles from mid-2027, with a stable ~20% annual growth rate. The ceiling isn't lack of demand but a bipartisan policy choice: private dollar tokens develop moderately to serve utility needs while avoiding competition with sovereign monetary systems. On-chain dollar velocity is tethered to policy certainty, which is stable and long-term in 2029.
The speculative segment persists, shrinking to a fixed niche, with occasional short-term frenzies, but overall influence equates to a sub-sector of the entertainment industry. Speculative traders disperse into prediction markets, the new private secondary market, and an outcome no one predicted in 2026: obtaining accredited investor status.
The third core question posed at the outset—how crypto becomes traditional financial infrastructure—is ultimately answered in a silent way: the question loses all relevance. Settlement functions rely on customized payment rails, blockchains, or hybrid architectures. The underlying details are only clear to operators; ordinary participants neither know nor care, just as they don't probe the clearinghouses behind their broker. The industry integration gradually initiated in late 2026 culminates in "complete invisibility." The ultimate victory of financial infrastructure is becoming mundane and unnoticed. What remains in the public eye is the core product crypto has been building through successive speculative cycles all along—an asset trading market.
Thus, all three core questions are answered through this logical framework:
- What determines token value? The timeless core: legally enforceable rights to cash flows from real assets. The market now eliminates all tokens failing this condition.
- How do cutting-edge technologies integrate with blockchain? Through primary and secondary private markets: tech startups don't need tokens, they need trading liquidity. When channels gain legal permission for public promotion, cutting-edge companies naturally land on-chain.
- What happens when crypto becomes traditional financial infrastructure? No landmark event occurs. Underlying functions become fully abstracted; the public never discusses the proposition separately again.
Some inferences here will inevitably be off, as stated upfront. The entire deduction hinges on one core validation metric: if by late 2028, ordinary investors still lack legal access to private assets, with all capital relying on offshore synthetic perpetuals and wrapped products, then this article's core thesis—"the industry bottleneck is legal, not technical"—fails, and the entire forecast's credibility must be significantly downgraded.
Just watch that one core variable, and verify the rest fully by 2029. I would rather give clear, falsifiable predictions than offer vague platitudes that can never be wrong.






