Introduction - What is Polkadot?
	    Polkadot is a
	        second-generation smart contract blockchain designed to solve many of the
	        scaling challenges that have impeded Ethereum since its introduction in 2015. 
	    But the main
	        reason so many people are so excited about Polkadot against the alternatives is
	        that it operates in an entirely different manner to the individual rival
	        blockchains on the market today.
	    It uses
	        technology called sharding to link together multiple blockchains in a single
	        network. These links allow those chains to process transactions in parallel, as
	        well as exchanging data between them, while each trades on the security
	        guarantee of using the underlying Polkadot network. 
	    In the Polkadot
	        whitepaper[1],
	        Dr Wood proposes theproject as “a scalable heterogenous multichain”, which he argues
	        overcomes many of
	        theshortcomings of discrete blockchains.
	    
	        Unlike previous
	            blockchain implementations which have focused on providing a single chain of
	            varying degrees of generality over potential applications, Polkadot itself is
	            designed to provide no inherent application functionality at all. Rather,
	            Polkadot provides the bedrock…upon which a large number of validatable,
	            globally-coherent dynamic data structures may be hosted side-by-side.
	    
	    In theory,
	        Polkadot allows any type of data — not just tokens or coins —  to be sent
	        between any type of blockchain, ushering in the age of cross-compatibility and
	        interoperability in a fragmented space. 
	    While Ethereum
	        2.0 will also bring in sharding to help it scale the number of transactions
	        currently flowing through it, Polkadot employs the technology in a slightly
	        different way. 
	    Shards on the
	        Polkadot network are referred to as ‘parachains’. These parachains can execute
	        parallel transactions for improved speed, without each chain necessarily
	        connecting to every other chain. 
	    The theory — now
	        being put into action — is that spreading transactions across these sharded
	        blockchains means that the ecosystem should be able to scale faster and more
	        cost-effectively than its blockchain competitors. 
	    Polkadot vs Ethereum
	    It is impossible
	        not to compare Polkadot to Ethereum: Polkadot explicitly make the comparison
	        with Ethereum 2.0[2] and
	        this should come
	        as no surprise to avid market
	        watchers. 
	    In the early
	        days of cryptocurrency, Ethereum attracted the best minds in distributed
	        computing and cryptography. Its original six-man founding team have created
	        some of the most influential and highly capitalised blockchain projects to
	        date. 
	    Alongside
	        Vitalik Buterin, the de-facto figurehead for the ~$470bn market cap blockchain[3], this group includes: 
	    ●Charles Hoskinson,the founder of Cardano, currently the world’s sixth-largest
	        crypto project witha market valuation of $43bn[4]; 
	    ●
	        Consensys founder
	        Joseph Lubin, whose enterprise blockchain software business created the
	        Metamask wallet and is valued at $3.2bn[5]; and 
	    ●
	        Polkadot founder, the
	        English computer scientist Dr Gavin Wood. 
	    One of Dr Wood’s
	        most lauded creations[6]
	        is Solidity, the
	        programming language used for
	        writing smart contracts on Ethereum, Tron and Avalanche. 
	    It is this technical prowess — and the status with which
	        he is revered in the crypto community — that has given Polkadot a huge
	        headstart. In the 18 months since its genesis block was launched, Polkadot has
	        already amassed a market cap of $27bn[7]. 
	        Despite this
	        relatively short incubation period,
	        there is clear appetite for a ‘blockchain of blockchains’, and Polkadot seems
	        to fit the bill.  
	    The Polkadot ecosystem is, by any metric, awash with crypto cash. Wood
	        tweeted[8] on 17
	        October that
	        the blockchain’s treasury stood
	        at over $500m “ready to spend on your ideas for building, improving,educating and indeed
	            anything else that
	            the Polkadot governance believesvaluable”.
	    The project is
	        overseen and developed by the Swiss non-profit Web3 Foundation[9], which like many other blockchain
	        foundations provides grants[10] to
	        development teams
	        helping to build out its
	        ecosystem of decentralised apps, blockchain explorers, wallets, NFT marketplaces
	        and other tools. 
	    The Polkadot Ecosystem
	    The RelayChain is the underlying
	        protocol that provides security for multiple sharded blockchains running in
	        parallel. Transactions from the parachains are confirmed on the Relay Chain
	        using a system of validators. 
	    Parachains are individually-designed blockchains
	        that can be built to run according to their own specific rules and regulations.
	        Each has smart contract functionality and can mint their own tokens, rather
	        than relying on the underlying blockchain’s native currency as a means of
	        exchange. They can be public and open for anyone to access (like Tezos, Bitcoin
	        or Ethereum), or private, where a single organisation has control, for example
	        Hyperledger Fabric or R3’s Corda. As such, each can perform a variety of
	        functions, and can be designed for high transaction throughput use cases like
	        DeFi, NFTs or gaming, or more industrial verticals like central bank digital
	        currencies, supply chains or healthcare. Polkadot allows parachains to
	        communicate with one another if they wish, allowing cross-chain data and token
	        exchanges. 
	    Parathreads are one step down in functionality from
	        parachains: these are effectively ‘pay as you go’ blockchains that still trade
	        on the security of the Relay Chain but don’t need to have a constant connection
	        with it. 
	    The difference
	        between parachains and parathreads is largely economic; the latter avoids the
	        auction method of selection (see below) and instead comes with a fixed fee for
	        registration which Polkadot says[11] will
	        “realistically be
	            muchlowerthan the cost of acquiring a parachain slot”. Parathreads are not currently
	        live on the network. The only estimate from Polkadot is that it expects them to
	        launch “some months” after parachains, and that this extra functionality
	        will need to be enabled through an on-chain governance vote. 
	    Bridges allow chains running on Polkadot to be
	        interoperable with external public blockchains like Bitcoin and Ethereum. 
	    Polkadot
	        currently supports 100 parachains and early roadmaps suggest that it could
	        accommodate many thousands of parathreads in future[12]. While block times on
	        parathreads
	        will
	        likely be slower, both can still connect individually to the Relay Chain,
	        giving developers of these linked projects the flexibility to determine their
	        own rules on how they operate. 
	    The network’s
	        native token is DOT. It is used as a stake in parachain auctions as well as for
	        making governance decisions on upgrades to the network.  
	    According to
	        Gavin Wood[13], internal
	        benchmarking in August 2020 proved
	        Polkadot capable of processing 1,000 transactions per second, with the lofty
	        projection of as many as 1 million transactions per second once parachains are
	        enacted. 
	    Auctioning off
	    To become one of
	        these highly-coveted parachains, blockchain projects must undergo an auction
	        process[14]
	        to win the right to
	        take up space and the
	        presumably cost-intensive nature of relying on the Polkadot’s Relay Chain
	        security. The project with the highest crowdloaned amount wins. 
	    This crowdloan
	        system, where parties lock up a minimum of 5 DOT for two years while a project
	        runs as a parachain, does two interesting things. Firstly, it proves out the
	        economic value of a project before release, drawing in much more capital to a
	        project before it goes live than might be realised otherwise. This is
	        evident in the cap table of investors for some of the winners, which includes
	        crypto VC royalty like Sequoia Capital, Coinbase Ventures, Pantera and
	        Polychain Capital. Secondly, it gives developers the chance to showcase their
	        product long before launch, building out a large community of stakeholders
	        beyond the initial team. 
	    DeFi and
	        stablecoin platform Acala was the first winner of a parachain auction, with
	        $1.3bn in DOT raised from over 81,000 wallets[15]. 
	    On 25 November,
	        the Ethereum-compatible smart contract project Moonbeam won[16] the second Polkadot auction,
	        with
	        more
	        than $1.4bn in DOT pledged. On 3 December, Japan’s dapp-focused Astar Network
	        took the top spot[17]
	        with 10.3m DOTpledged by
	        27,100 investors. ParallelFinance took the fourth parachain auction slot with 10.75m DOT
	        pledged[18]. At time of writing,
	        Clover
	        Finance and
	        EFinity are leading the race for the fifth and final auction slot in this
	        batch, with around 7.4 million DOT pledged to each project apiece[19].
	    Polkadot leases
	        out its parachain slots for 96 weeks (two years) at a time, with an option to
	        renew. The first batch of auction-winning projects, Acala, Moonbeam, Astar
	        Network, Parallel Finance and the final winner will operate on the network
	        until October 2023[20],
	        with their launch
	        date scheduled for 18 December
	        2021.  
	    Nominated Proof of Stake
	    Polkadot uses a
	        Nominated Proof of Stake (NPos) consensus mechanism. The blockchain was
	        initially launched using an entirely centralised Proof of Authority setup,
	        where six validators run by the Web3 Foundation maintained the chain to ensure
	        its smooth running, and acted to attract a diverse subset of new validators.
	        Polkadot switched over to NPos as part of its latest update. This system allows
	        DOT holders to stake their token and help to secure the network, either by
	        running nodes as a validator and confirming transactions, as well as adding
	        blocks to the Relay Chain. Alternatively, for those holding fewer DOT, there is
	        the possibility to allocate their tokens to nominate up to 16 elected
	        validators. Staking rewards for this option are currently in the region of 6.5%
	        APY[21].
	    
	    The minimum
	        number of DOT to be allowed to stake is not fixed, as it is with Ethereum (stakers
	        must have 32 ETH to make a deposit into the ETH2 smart contract[22]). Instead the figure is
	        flexible,
	        and
	        since inception has varied from 40 DOT as high as 350 DOT. As of 24 November
	        2021[23], the
	        minimum is 120
	        DOT (~$3,175), although
	        Polkadot says this is subject to change. 
	    Both validators
	        and nominators are rewarded with DOT for helping to process transactions and
	        secure the network. The way the Polkadot network encourages good behaviour is
	        to punish both validators and nominators if a validator attacks the network,
	        attempts to run modified software or goes offline along with at least 10% of
	        other validators (which could be construed as a malicious attack)[24]. This is called ‘slashing’, and
	        means a
	        percentage of staked tokens are taken from validators — and the nominators that
	        elected them — and returned to the Polkadot treasury. It’s a sensible slice of
	        game theory which means that nominators will likely seek out validators with
	        the best reputation before staking tokens to nominate them. 
	    Governance
	    Polkadot’s
	        governance model is on-chain and enacted autonomously, allowing the blockchain
	        to evolve without the need for contentious and lengthy battles between opposing
	        sides. As such, it is possible to upgrade the blockchain more seamlessly that
	        would otherwise be possible. 
	    Changes to the
	        system are proposed and voted upon on-chain. 
	    By contrast,
	        Ethereum governance occurs off-chain[25] through
	        numerous discussion
	        channels.
	        The Ethereum Foundation itself admits that: 
	    
	        Since so many people depend on
	            Ethereum'sstability,there is a very high coordination threshold for core changes, including
	            socialand
	            technical processes, to ensure any changes to Ethereum are secure andwidely supported by the
	            community.
	    
	    The downside of such a method (compared to on-chain
	        governance) is that it can take much longer to agree on protocol upgrades. With
	        the speed of change in blockchain development lightning fast, delays of weeks
	        or months can be critical.    
	    DOT
	        holders can submit proposals and/or vote on existing upgrades, or nominate
	        themselves to an on-chain Council, which represents more passive DOT holders in
	        much the same way as current political structures in democratic countries.
	    Valuation
	    Social signals
	        can give us a decent rough estimate of the retail popularity of any given
	        blockchain. For example, the size of the discussion group dedicated to a
	        particular crypto on Reddit. At 69,000 members[26],
	        r/Polkadot is not in the same
	        league as
	        longer-standing protocols like Bitcoin Cash’s (604,000 members in the
	        subreddit), but is comparable with the likes of Solana and Chainlink. 
	    In terms of
	        institutional investment products, those dedicated to Polkadot remain limited
	        as of midway-through Q4 2021, but more are starting to appear. 
	    Osprey Funds was
	        first to market with a Polkadot Trust in April 2021[27], albeit with a rather bold 2.5%
	        management fee. Valour then followed 21Shares to market with a Polkadot ETP in
	        spring of 2021[28]. And
	        while the
	        world’s largest digital asset
	        manager, Grayscale, filed with the SEC to open a Polkadot Trust[29] in January 2021, at time of
	        writing the
	        product had not yet made it to market.  
	    Capital-rich
	        investors a little further ahead on the maturity curve are piling into DOT,
	        however. 
	    Messari’s Q3
	        2021 analysis of crypto hedge funds[30] found Polkadot
	        the lead
	        investment by
	        quite some considerable margin. 
	    
	         
	        
	    
	    As we head into
	        2022, it has become evident that the market is evolving from one where both
	        value and development is highly concentrated among a small number of players,
	        into a multi-chain world. While Ethereum was once the single blockchain that
	        underpinned decentralised finance markets, competitors are rising quickly to
	        snap at its heels. 
	    And while
	        Ethereum still retains near-total dominance of the NFT market as the basis for
	        49 of the top 50 markets by daily trading volume[31],  long-standing
	        issues
	        around its
	        scalability, very high transaction fees and slow confirmations has led to
	        alternatives grabbing market share. While some of these are Layer 2 additions
	        to Ethereum itself, like Arbitrum and Polygon, other chains are creeping into
	        the mix. 
	    For example, the
	        top 10 DeFi protocols by Total Value Locked now looks very different to just
	        six months ago. 
	    
	         Source: DeFiLlama.com[32]
	            | Data
	            correct as of 9 December 2021
	        Source: DeFiLlama.com[32]
	            | Data
	            correct as of 9 December 2021
	    
	    All of this has
	        happened remarkably quickly, as it tends to do in the fast-paced blockchain
	        space. Polkadot pitches itself as a solution to this fragmentation: with the
	        overarching aim from the Web3 Foundation of creating a decentralised web as the
	        next stage of evolution of the internet itself.  
	    In the interim,
	        the addition of crowdloan-funded projects into an auction setup is innovative,
	        and has attracted the attention of not just crypto VC funders, but large communities
	        of users too. 
	    While some have
	        suggested Polkadot enacts zero transaction fees, this is a little bit of a
	        misnomer: there are transaction fees but they remain reasonably low. One
	        estimate puts a simple balance transfer at around 0.015 DOT or $0.40.
	    Transactions
	        that take place on parachains don’t incur Relay Chain fees in DOT (because each
	        project may have its own token, or be tokenless). Projects may set their own
	        transaction fees — as parachain auction winner Acala has done[33].
	    What is true is
	        that unlike Ethereum, where gas prices need to be competitive to compensate
	        miners for including transactions in a block, Polkadot already gives newly
	        minted DOT to its validators and nominators, and these actors aren’t strictly
	        competing against one another on price. Transactions fees can be calculated
	        with reasonable certainty in advance, which is a major boon for businesses
	        trying to profit from large and growing DeFi markets. 
	    In terms of valuation, it is still relatively early in
	        the story of Polkadot. As the chart below displays, the multichain bridge has a
	        long way to go to catch up with the kinds of dollar values being transacted
	        through rival networks. The original cryptocurrency, Bitcoin, leads in terms of
	        total transaction value, but the growth momentum has shifted to the kinds of
	        smart contract blockchains that can more easily allow decentralised apps to be
	        built and run on top of them, such as Ethereum (ETH) and Cardano (ADA). 
	    
	         
	        
	    
	    Since the 26 May 2020 network launch, active accounts
	        have been growing steadily, but we have not yet seen the kind of parabolic
	        movement one might hope for from a network that is up and running at scale. 
	    Venture capital and hedge funds are investing heavily in
	        both Polkadot itself, and as has been made obvious by the likes of parachain
	        auction winners Moonbeam and Acala, projects that will compete directly with
	        Ethereum-based DeFi and decentralised apps.  
	    Conclusion
	    Polkadot is not
	        the first Proof of Stake blockchain. In the last four years, Proof of Stake
	        chains have taken over the charts and their representation in the top 20 coins
	        by market cap has tripled[34]. What
	        Polkadot does
	        promise is a way to usher in
	        the age of cross-compatibility: and that is a sell that VCs, hedge funds and
	        the wider crypto community are getting behind in their droves. 
	    Given the rapid
	        growth of DeFi and NFT protocols in the last two years, investors are already
	        living in a multichain world, whether they realise it or not. Ethereum is not
	        the monolith that it once was, and the rise of clear competitors like Solana,
	        Avalanche and now Polkadot is testament to this point. 
	    When the Polkadot genesis block was launched on 26 May
	        2020, it did so to considerable fanfare, led by a charismatic Ethereum
	        co-founder using all the tools at his disposal to make decentralised apps blockchain-agnostic.
	    
	    DeFi is a massive growth market and is likely to continue
	        the trend into 2022. Polkadot has moved out of the theoretical phase and into
	        reality, and we have seen precisely how successful it has been in the early
	        crowdloan phase, with individual parachain auction projects raising billions of
	        dollars-worth of DOT for this prestigious position. 
	    A lot of
	        Polkadot’s popularity is based on promise. And while even six months ago, there
	        were few live projects to point to, that state is changing. 
	    There are only a handful of people in the world that can
	        build a successful blockchain network based on cutting-edge cryptography and
	        make it a success. Polkadot hinges on Gavin Wood and the kinds of teams
	        Polkadot is able to attract to its stable. 
	    The community reaction to crowdfunding auctions has been
	        impressive to date, with hundreds of thousands of individuals and businesses
	        lending their support 
	    At the same time, the number of blockchain projects
	        identifying themselves as a technological improvement on Ethereum has grown
	        sharply. That’s mainly due to the strength of the incumbent smart contract
	        blockchain, its dominance over DeFi and NFT markets, and the growth of its
	        market cap above $400bn, while at the same time users and developers identify and
	        encounter clear UI, UX and cost issues that have been ongoing since at least
	        2018. 
	    There are clear long-standing problems with Ethereum.
	        Severe network congestion, unworkably high transaction fees, and off-chain
	        governance, which slows development to a crawl. Hence the rise of the
	        ‘Ethereum-killer’ blockchain. A bet on Polkadot is a bet on a multichain smart
	        contract future, which has become not just a compelling argument, but the
	        dominant narrative facing crypto as a whole. 
	    
	    
	                                                            
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