The Game Between Tokens and Equity: Revealing the Fundamental Conflict Behind Token Economics

比推Publicado em 2025-12-11Última atualização em 2025-12-11

Resumo

The article "The Dark Side of Altcoins" by Crypto Dan explores the fundamental conflict between company equity and token holders in crypto projects. It argues that most projects are essentially companies with tokens, creating a structural conflict where equity (backed by VCs and boards) inevitably captures value at the expense of token holders. This leads to tokens trending toward zero despite project success. Hyperliquid is highlighted as an exception because it avoided VC equity financing, directing all economic value to the protocol instead of a corporate entity. The piece explains that tokens cannot legally function like stocks without being classified as securities, triggering regulatory issues. The ideal structure involves no company revenue capture, value accrual to token holders via mechanisms like buybacks, and DAO-controlled economic decisions. However, true alignment requires no corporate structure at all, akin to Bitcoin or Ethereum. The core issue is structural: tokens fail due to design flaws like VC funding, private sales, unlock schedules, or company revenue retention. Solutions require investors to stop funding flawed models and support projects like Hyperliquid that prioritize tokenholder alignment through thoughtful design.

Author: Crypto Dan

Compiled by: Saoirse, Foresight News

Original title: The Dark Side of Altcoins


People always ask why almost all tokens go to zero, with only a few exceptions like Hyperliquid.

It all boils down to one thing that no one talks about openly: the structural game between company equity and token holders.

Let me explain it in simple terms.

Most cryptocurrency projects are essentially just companies with an attached token

They have the following characteristics:

  • An entity company

  • Founders holding equity

  • VC investors with board seats

  • CEO, CTO, CFO

  • Profit goals

  • Future exit (cashing out) expectations

Then, they casually issue a token.

What's the problem?

Only one of these two can capture value, and equity almost always wins.

Why Dual Financing (Equity + Token) Doesn't Work

If a project raises funds through both equity and a token sale, it immediately creates conflicting interests:

Equity side's demands:

  • Revenue → Flows to the company

  • Profit → Flows to the company

  • Value → Belongs to shareholders

  • Control → Belongs to the board

Token side's demands:

  • Revenue → Flows to the protocol

  • Token buyback / burn mechanisms

  • Governance rights

  • Value appreciation

These two systems will forever be in a game against each other.

Most founders ultimately choose the path that satisfies the VCs, and the token's value continuously erodes.

This is why, even if many projects are "superficially successful," their tokens still inevitably go to zero.

Why Hyperliquid Stands Out in a Field Where 99.9% of Projects Fail

Besides being the protocol with the highest fee revenue in the crypto industry, the project also avoided the biggest "killer" of tokens — VC equity financing rounds.

Hyperliquid never sold its equity, has no VC-dominated board, and thus no pressure to direct value to the company.

This allows the project to do what most cannot: direct all economic value to the protocol, not to the corporate entity.

This is the fundamental reason its token can be an "exception" in the market.

Why Tokens Legally Cannot Function Like Stocks

People always ask: "Why can't we make tokens directly equivalent to company stock?"

Because if a token has any of the following characteristics, it will be deemed an "unregistered security":

  • Dividend payments

  • Ownership

  • Corporate voting rights

  • Legal claim to profits

Then, US regulators would crack down on the project overnight: exchanges couldn't list the token, holders would need KYC, and its global distribution would be illegal.

Therefore, the crypto industry has chosen a different development path.

(The Optimal Legal Structure Used by Successful Protocols)

Today, the "ideal" model is as follows:

  1. The company does not capture any revenue; all fees belong to the protocol;

  2. Token holders capture value through protocol mechanisms (e.g., buybacks, burns, staking rewards, etc.);

  3. Founders capture value through tokens, not dividends;

  4. There is no VC equity;

  5. Economic decision-making power is held by a DAO, not the company;

  6. Smart contracts automatically distribute value on-chain;

  7. Equity becomes a "cost center," not a "profit center."

This structure allows the token to function economically similarly to a stock while avoiding securities laws. Hyperliquid is the most typical successful case study currently.

But Even the Most Ideal Structure Cannot Fully Eliminate Contradictions

As long as a project still has a corporate entity, potential conflicts of interest will always exist.

The only path to achieving a truly "conflict-free" state is to reach the ultimate form like Bitcoin/Ethereum:

  • No corporate entity

  • No equity

  • Protocol runs autonomously

  • Development work funded by a DAO

  • Possesses neutral infrastructure properties

  • No legal entity that can be attacked

Achieving this is extremely difficult, but the most competitive projects are moving in this direction.

The Core Reality

Most tokens fail not because of "poor marketing" or "bear market conditions," but because of flaws in their structural design.

If a project has any of the following characteristics, it is mathematically impossible for the token to achieve long-term sustainable appreciation. Such designs are doomed from the start:

  • Has conducted VC equity financing

  • Has conducted private token sales

  • Has token unlock schedules for investors

  • Allows the company to capture revenue

  • Uses the token as a marketing coupon

Conversely, projects with the following characteristics can achieve completely different end results:

  • Direct value to the protocol

  • Avoid VC equity financing

  • Have no investor token unlock schedules

  • Align founder interests with token holders

  • Make the company economically insignificant

Hyperliquid's success is not "luck"; it stems from thoughtful design, a sound token economic model, and a high degree of interest alignment.

So, the next time you think you've "found the next 100x potential token," maybe you have, but unless the project adopts a token economic design like Hyperliquid pioneered, its ultimate fate will still be a slow grind to zero.

The Solution

Project teams will only optimize token economics when investors stop providing capital for projects with flawed designs. They won't change because you complain; they will only adjust when you stop giving them money.

This is why projects like MetaDAO and Street are so important to the industry — they are pioneering new standards for token structures and holding project teams accountable.

The future direction of the industry is in your hands, so allocate your capital wisely.


Twitter:https://twitter.com/BitpushNewsCN

Bitpush TG Group:https://t.me/BitPushCommunity

Bitpush TG Subscription: https://t.me/bitpush

Original link:https://www.bitpush.news/articles/7595034

Perguntas relacionadas

QWhat is the fundamental conflict between tokens and equity in crypto projects according to the article?

AThe fundamental conflict arises from the structural tension between company equity and token holders. Equity holders (founders, VCs) benefit from company profits, revenue, and control, while token holders seek value accrual to the protocol through mechanisms like buybacks, burns, and governance. These interests are inherently opposed, and equity almost always wins, leading to token value drainage.

QWhy does the article claim that dual financing (equity + token) doesn't work?

ADual financing creates conflicting interests: equity side demands revenue, profits, and value to flow to the company and shareholders, while token side expects value to accrue to the protocol via mechanisms like revenue sharing or token burns. This conflict forces founders to prioritize VC interests, causing token value to decline over time.

QHow does Hyperliquid avoid the typical pitfalls that cause most tokens to fail?

AHyperliquid avoids VC equity financing rounds, has no VC-dominated board, and directs all economic value to the protocol instead of a corporate entity. This alignment ensures token holders capture value through protocol fees and avoids the pressure to divert value to shareholders, making it an exception in the market.

QWhat legal constraints prevent tokens from functioning like traditional stocks?

ATokens cannot function like stocks because features such as dividend payments, ownership rights, corporate voting, or profit claims would classify them as unregistered securities. This would attract severe regulatory scrutiny, including delisting from exchanges, KYC requirements for holders, and legal violations for global distribution.

QWhat are the key characteristics of an ideal token protocol structure to minimize conflicts?

AThe ideal structure includes: no company revenue (all fees go to the protocol), value accrual to token holders via mechanisms like burns or staking rewards, founders benefiting from tokens rather than dividends, no VC equity, DAO-controlled economic decisions, on-chain value distribution via smart contracts, and making equity a cost center rather than a profit center. This mimics stock-like economics without triggering securities laws.

Leituras Relacionadas

$292 Million KelpDAO Cross-Chain Bridge Hack: Who Should Foot the Bill?

On April 18, 2026, an attacker stole 116,500 rsETH (worth ~$292M) from KelpDAO’s cross-chain bridge in 46 minutes—the largest DeFi exploit of 2026. The stolen assets were deposited into Aave V3 as collateral, causing $177–200M in bad debt and triggering a cascade of losses across nine DeFi protocols. Aave’s TVL dropped by ~$6B overnight. This legal analysis argues that KelpDAO and LayerZero Labs share concurrent liability, with fault apportioned 60%/40%. KelpDAO negligently configured its bridge with a 1-of-1 decentralized verifier network (DVN)—a single point of failure—despite LayerZero’s explicit recommendation of a 2-of-3 setup. LayerZero, which operated the compromised DVN, failed to secure its RPC infrastructure against a known poisoning attack vector. Both protocols’ terms of service cap liability at $200 (KelpDAO) or $50 (LayerZero), but these limits are likely unenforceable due to unconscionability, gross negligence exceptions, and potential securities law invalidation (if rsETH is deemed a security under the Howey test). Aave’s governance also faces fiduciary duty claims for raising rsETH’s loan-to-value ratio to 93%—far above competitors’ 72–75%—without adequately assessing bridge risks, amplifying the systemic fallout. Practical recovery targets include LayerZero Labs (a registered Canadian entity), KelpDAO’s founders, auditors, and identifiable Aave governance delegates. The incident underscores escalating legal risks for DeFi protocols, infrastructure providers, and governance participants.

marsbitHá 37m

$292 Million KelpDAO Cross-Chain Bridge Hack: Who Should Foot the Bill?

marsbitHá 37m

Insider Trading in War: 5 People Involved, the Highest Earner Was Arrested

On April 24, the U.S. Department of Justice arrested U.S. Army Special Forces Staff Sergeant Gannon Ken Van Dyke for insider trading related to the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro on January 3. Van Dyke allegedly profited over $400,000 by placing bets on a prediction market, Polymarket, using insider knowledge of the covert operation. According to the indictment, Van Dyke registered an account (0x31a5) on December 26 and made a series of bets predicting Maduro’s capture and U.S. military involvement in Venezuela. He withdrew most of his funds on the day of the operation and attempted to obscure his tracks by transferring assets through crypto and brokerage accounts. This case marks the first time the DOJ has prosecuted insider trading on Polymarket. PolyBeats had previously identified five suspicious accounts, including Van Dyke’s—the highest earner—in January. The other accounts, with profits ranging from $34,000 to $145,000, remain under unofficial scrutiny but have not been charged. Their lower profits, indirect access to information, and unclear legal boundaries may complicate prosecution. Polymarket has since strengthened its market integrity rules, explicitly prohibiting trading based on confidential or insider information. Van Dyke’s arrest, nearly four months after his trades, signals increased regulatory attention and the persistent traceability of blockchain-based transactions.

marsbitHá 39m

Insider Trading in War: 5 People Involved, the Highest Earner Was Arrested

marsbitHá 39m

Bitwise: Bullish on Bitcoin's Performance in the Second Half of the Year, AI and Regulation Will Spark a New Altcoin Season

Bitwise CIO Matt Hougan and Research Lead Ryan Rasmussen express strong bullish sentiment on Bitcoin's long-term prospects, suggesting that its $1 million price target may be too conservative. They argue Bitcoin serves a dual role: as digital gold and a potential global settlement asset, especially amid declining trust in traditional monetary systems. Despite a weak Q1 2026 where nearly all crypto assets and prices saw double-digit declines, the analysts remain optimistic due to strong forward-looking catalysts, including institutional adoption via Bitcoin ETFs from major firms like Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs. Geopolitical instability, such as Iran’s mention of using Bitcoin for international payments, increases the value of Bitcoin’s “out-of-the-money call option” as a non-political, global settlement currency. This enhances its appeal beyond a mere store of value. . Additionally, Hougan highlights that a clearer regulatory token framework under current SEC leadership, combined with AI efficiency gains and high-performance blockchains, could fuel a new “altseason” by late 2026. This may lead to a wave of legitimate, value-capturing token projects, unlike the earlier ICO boom. . Bitwise also announced an Avalanche ETF, citing its unique architecture and rapid growth in real-world asset (RWA) tokenization, which has surged 10x to nearly $30 billion in two years. The firm believes Layer 1 blockchains are still early in their growth cycle, with significant potential ahead.

marsbitHá 1h

Bitwise: Bullish on Bitcoin's Performance in the Second Half of the Year, AI and Regulation Will Spark a New Altcoin Season

marsbitHá 1h

Trading

Spot
Futuros
活动图片