Institutional funds, DeFi show ETH is additional investment
	        of choice 
	    Analysis of data
	        compiled across Q3 by ETC Group shows that Ethereum became another institutional
	        investment of choice in cryptocurrency.
	    Figures from
	        CryptoCompare’s Digital
	            Asset Market Report 2021,
	        released on 14 September, shows that Ethereum-based institutional investment
	        products reached their highest market share of AUM in September, at 25.9%. 
	    This suggests
	        institutional investors are moving further down the value chain away from just
	        Bitcoin for broader cryptocurrency exposure.  
	    Grayscale’s
	        Ethereum Trust (ETHE) was also the most-traded digital asset product in
	        September, with average daily volumes increasing 29% to $250m, toppling
	        Grayscale’s Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) for the first time ever. Average 30-day volume
	        for ETHE hit $7.18m, compared to $5.16m for GBTC, CryptoCompare found. 
	    ETH futures show the way
	    JP Morgan’s
	        Global Strategy Report, released
	        on 22 September 2021,
	        supports this conclusion. 
	    “Our metrics
	            based on CME futures show strong preference for ethereum vs bitcoin by
	            institutional investors,” the researchers noted. 
	    Each CME Ether
	        futures contract consists of 50 ETH, worth $216,000 at current market prices.
	    When demand for
	        Bitcoin futures is strong, those futures trade at a positive spread over the
	        spot price, called contango. But when demand is weak and expectations turn
	        bearish, the futures curve shifts into backwardation.
	    
	        
	            This was the case between [May 2020 and July 2021]...we thus believe that the return to
	            backwardation in September is a negative signal pointing to weak demand for bitcoin by
	            institutional investors.
	            
	            “In contrast, ethereum futures remain in contango and if anything this contango
	            steepened in September towards a 7% annualized pace. This points to much healthier
	            demand for ethereum vs bitcoin by institutional investors.
	        
	    
	    What is driving institutional interest
	        in Ethereum?
	    Between
	        January and September 2021, Bitcoin’s share of AUM in institutional funds fell
	        from 81% to 67%, with the largest AUM winner being Ethereum, according to
	        Coinshares data. 
	    The explosion in
	        Ethereum developer activity thanks to NFTs and DeFi has clearly buoyed investor
	        confidence. 
	    Cathie Wood, CEO
	        of Ark Invest, spoke to this point at September’s SALT New York
	            2021, the global
	        thought-leadership conference founded by Anthony Scaramucci’s SkyBridge
	        Capital. 
	    “I’m
	            fascinated with what’s going on in DeFi, which is collapsing the cost of
	            infrastructure for financial services in a way that I know the traditional
	            financial industry does not appreciate right now,” she said, in comments reported
	        by BlockWorks.
	    
	        
	            Our confidence in ether has gone up dramatically as we’ve seen the beginning of this
	            transition from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake.
	        
	    
	    According to SEC 13F
	            filings reported on 8
	        August 2021, Ark Invest is the largest investor in Grayscale’s Ethereum Trust
	        (ETHE) with 721,936 shares worth $16.15m. Rothschild Investment Corp is the
	        second-largest, with 303,554 shares totalling £8.3m. 
	    Deflationary tokenomics
	    7.8 million ETH
	        now sit in the ETH2 deposit contract, providing investors with an unparalleled
	        insight into the robust community support for Ethereum’s long-term switch to a 
	        Proof of Stake consensus mechanism. This smart contract is where users send
	        their ether to stake them on the network — with rewards due to participants of
	        up to 23%. 
	    Recent updates
	        from the nonprofit Ethereum Foundation put the date of the
	            Merge, where Proof of Stake
	        takes over from Proof of Work, as Q1 or Q2 2022. This will eliminate the need
	        for energy-intensive mining to secure the blockchain and cut Ethereum’s energy
	        usage by around
	            99.95%, according to
	        official estimates. 
	    More clarity
	        around this date has aided institutional investment in Ethereum: before these
	        updates, stakers had entered into a near-indefinite lockup situation.  
	    In addition, the
	        changes made to Ethereum’s core tokenomics in Q3 produced a strong uptick in
	        institutional interest. 
	    Eric Conner, a
	        core developer for Ethereum and co-author of the EIP1559 update, tweeted in the
	        wake of the London hard fork on 7 August: “EIP1559 has cut the ETH yearly
	            inflation rate from 4.2% to 2.6%. Once the merge happens and [Proof of Stake]
	            is live, this will be a negative number. Ethereum will be secure while ETH [is]
	            deflationary.” 
	    The total value
	        of ETH removed from circulation reached $100m seven days after the hard fork
	        and $500m within two weeks.
	    By
	        mid-September, more than $1bn in ETH had been burned. These numbers are
	        continuing to accelerate. In total to date more than
	            588,00ETH ($2bn) has been excised from the Ethereum
	        supply and continues at an average rate of $30m a day.  
	    
	        
	        
	    
	    So what of Ethereum’s Layer One
	        competitors?
	    Inflows to
	        institutional Solana (SOL) funds began in August 2021, garnering a large amount
	        of media headlines. But Ethereum still largely dominates weekly institutional
	        fund flows, as per data published by CoinShares. 
	    The figures
	        cover funds aimed at institutional investors that are issued by Grayscale, ETC
	        Group, 21Shares, BitWise, 3iQ, Purpose and CoinShares. 
	    The AUM of
	        Solana products also remains miniscule compared to Ethereum. As noted above,
	        Ethereum’s share of institutional investment products grew to almost 26% of the
	        market in September. Despite one week where investors ploughed nearly $50m into
	        SOL funds, the blockchain made up only $88m of the total $52.9bn invested in
	        cryptocurrency funds as recorded by CoinShares. Bitcoin comprises $35.5bn of
	        the total market AUM while Ethereum makes up $12.9bn.  
	    
	        
	        
	    
	    And
	        It has not gone unnoticed among institutions that Solana does sacrifice
	        decentralisation to a degree. Sufficient decentralisation both in geographic
	        distribution and in terms of who runs validating nodes is a non-trivial
	        security question, one that both Bitcoin and Ether have both answered. Solana,
	        however has significant critics in this area: Messari
	            Research suggests that 49% of SOL tokens are owned by
	        insiders. 
	    Ethereum
	        is no longer the only show in town, but it remains dominant among smart
	        contract platforms. 
	    Investors seek
	        Ethereum’s security in blockchain DeFi wars 
	    Evidence
	        built across the financial quarter that DeFi developers are starting to
	        broadening their focus to multichain applications instead of focusing solely on
	        Ethereum. 
	    In
	        Q2 2021, 79 of the top 80 projects as tracked by industry
	        data site DeFiPulse.com used
	        Ethereum.
	    By
	        the end of Q3 those numbers were starting to shift. In the hunt for faster and
	        cheaper services, the largest and third-largest DeFi protocols by TVL, Aave and
	        Curve Finance, switched from Ethereum-only to multichain support, while Polygon
	        entered the charts for the first time with two DeFi projects. 
	    
	        
	        
	    
	    Not recorded in
	        these figures are the rise of Binance Smart Chain and Solana. In the
	        post-quarter period the latter secured its largest haul of $12.7bn
	            liquidity locked in DeFi
	        protocols.
	     
	    And
	        initial look at Ethereum’s largest smart contract competitor, Binance Smart
	        Chain, would seem to suggest that it is way out in front. Daily transaction
	        rates on CZ Zhao’s dapp-centric blockchain were nearly 5 times that of
	        Ethereum, according to ETC Group analysis of blockchain explorer data in Q3. 
	    But
	        at the same time, the Total Value Locked in smart contracts has barely moved
	        for BSC in Q3 2021. At the start of the period, $13.5bn was locked in BSC DeFi
	        smart contracts, according to DeFiLlama data. By the end of Q3, this figure
	        shifted just 20.1% to $16.4bn. Compare that to the 42.7% rise in liquidity
	        locked in Ethereum across the quarter, from $86.7bn to $123.9bn
	    Flash
	        loan attacks on Binance Smart Chain protocols continue to cause considerable
	        damage to investor confidence. 
	    And
	        large institutional transactions — those over $10m — accounted for 60% of DeFi
	        in Q2 2021, compared to under 50% for all cryptocurrency transactions,
	        according to research published
	        by Chainalysis on 24
	        August. 
	    So
	        since we now know that institutions are now carrying out the majority of DeFi
	        activity, one obvious conclusion is that institutions are avoiding Binance for
	        the safety of Ethereum.  
	    Speaking
	        to Forkast.News, one institutional DeFi operative who runs a corporate debt
	        marketplace on Ethereum laid
	            out the scenario. 
	    
	        
	            [Institutions are] most attracted by capital preservation and risk mitigation because
	            these are fixed income products. They think in risk-adjusted terms, so they’re looking
	            for yields that are more attractive than what is available in traditional finance, but
	            these yields can’t come at the expense of risk management and security.
	        
	        Sidney Powell, CEO, Maple Finance
	    
	    Maple
	        Finance provided
	            $72.7m in undercollateralised loans to partners in Q3
	        2021, and the company claims that over 80% of deposits were larger than $1m,
	        demonstrating the depth of institutional capital on the platform. Two key
	        points to make here are a) that the quality of counterparties plays a big role
	        in how institutions interact with DeFi and b) security must be as close to
	        unimpeachable as possible.  
	    We
	        would assert that continued failures, flash loan attacks and exit scams on
	        Binance Smart Chain make it difficult for institutions to assign capital to
	        projects there.  
	    Interrogating
	        alternative datasets provides slightly differing figures, but ultimately the
	        same conclusion. Data provider DeFiLlama attests that Ethereum led strongly in
	        terms of TVL across Q3 2021, with Binance in second spot and newer protocols
	        Solana, Terra and Avalanche providing just a fraction of the total. 
	    
	        
	        
	    
	    As
	        Glassnode research published
	        on 26 August found, among
	        Solana, Avalanche and Terra, none of the three hosted more than five projects
	        with greater than $100m in liquidity. 
	    
	        
	            If Ethereum [Layer 2 projects] struggle to scale the network, or create a heavy barrier
	            for user experience, users may naturally gravitate towards alternative chains [but]
	            while some alternative layer one smart contract platforms [have grown], actual liquidity
	            on each chain remains limited relative to the Ethereum chain...developers will have to
	            assess the viability and longevity of additional users and capital moving on or off of
	            Ethereum.
	        
	    
	    There
	        are regulatory factors to consider, too. Of the crypto projects on the market,
	        only Bitcoin and Ether have been determined as sufficiently decentralised to
	        not to considered securities by the SEC. The same cannot be said for Binance,
	        which has faced multiple regulatory setbacks, including the 6
	            August exit of its US CEO Brian
	        Brooks after just three months in the job. Brooks, let us not forget, is a
	        former OCC Comptroller, responsible for some of the most high-profile
	        crypto-friendly policy shifts in US banking history.
	    Conclusions
	    Ethereum
	        became the institutional investment option of choice in Q3 2021. It still
	        dominates DeFi markets, despite the rise of alternative blockchains, largely
	        due to ongoing network effects and the perception of its strong
	        decentralisation and security. 
	    More
	        certainly about the date for Ethereum’s Merge has aided this perception, and
	        the ongoing growth of the size of the ETH2 deposit contract to more than $25bn
	        is testament to the faith that both retail and institutions have in the
	        programmable money blockchain. 
	    Finally,
	        while Layer 1 competitors like Solana have captured the imagination of retail
	        investors, and provide the kind of trade finality, speed and transaction fees
	        with which Ethereum cannot currently compete, institutional investors remain
	        relatively cautious about allocating capital to protocols using these
	        alternatives. 
	    NFT sales up 20,000% 
	    NFTs the ‘Trojan horse’ to bring crypto to
	        1bn users
	    Cryptocurrency
	        adoption has hit 200m users, according to the latest available data, but NFTs
	        will be the spark to take crypto to its first 1 billion users. 
	    NFT sales are up
	        a stunning 20,000% year on year, analysis by ETC Group reveals. The rate of
	        growth in this crypto niche has shocked even seasoned investors, despite its
	        relatively long history in cryptocurrency terms. 
	    Sales of
	        non-fungible tokens grew from $18.4m in Q3 2020 to $3.66bn across Q3 2021.
	    Relatively
	        unheralded in the outside world when they arrived in 2017, the first NFTs,
	        CryptoKitties, were so popular among Ethereum users that their use routinely
	            overloaded the network. 
	    But it was in Q3
	        2021 when NFTs really hit their stride. The crypto subsector was undoubtedly
	        the story of the quarter, and figures compiled by ETC Group show that sales are
	        up by 19,793% year on year. NFT sales are also up by 385% quarter on quarter. 
	    The NFT craze
	        has been happening for years, in various cycles. Beginning with CryptoKitties
	        and moving through NBA TopShot, now through to the Opensea and Rarible art and
	        meme markets. 
	    There is no
	        question that these newer marketplaces are responsible for the growth of the
	        wider market. 
	    OpenSea is the
	        number one ETH burner after the introduction of deflationary tokenomics to the
	        Ethereum blockchain in August’s London hard fork. Data
	        from Dune Analytics shows the marketplace eclipsed Uniswap DeFi transactions,
	        Axie Infinity, stablecoins Tether (USDT) and USDCoin (USDC) and crypto wallet
	        MetaMask, and to date has burned almost twice as many ETH as any other
	        platform. 
	    
	        
	        
	    
	    Why are NFTs growing so quickly?
	    NFTs hit an
	        inflection point in Q3 2021, and now invite the same excitement as the ICO boom
	        of 2017-2018, the formation of the first true capital markets for
	        cryptocurrency. 
	    One reason for
	        the spike in NFT markets is that, in direct opposition to fungible tokens and
	        blockchains, there is a strong shared technical basis for NFTs. The vast
	        majority of the market is made up of NFTs created as ERC-721 and ERC-1155
	        tokens on the Ethereum blockchain.
	    Around 77% of
	        all NFTs use Ethereum, according to research
	        of Q3 figures by
	        Dappradar. The blockchain intelligence platform tracks sales across four major
	        blockchains: Binance Smart Chain, Ethereum, Flow — home to NBA’s Top Shots — and
	        Wax. 
	    According to
	        CoinMetrics, there were a total of 9.8 million ERC-721 token transfers in Q3,
	        up 305% quarter-on-quarter.
	    
	        
	        
	    
	    It’s not just
	        retail traders either. Corporates are starting to enter the NFT space in
	        increasing numbers. Visa’s 23 August purchase
	        of CryptoPunks #7610 — a
	        digital avatar of a woman with green eye makeup and red lipstick — for $150,000
	        in ETH is emblematic of the way that corporations are thinking about NFTs going
	        forward. 
	    So who sold the
	        CryptoPunk to Visa? A former equities trader known pseudonymously as G.money.
	        He appeared on the Castle Island Ventures podcast On The Brink to explain the
	        rampant growth of NFTs. 
	    “You know
	            that Bank of America, Mastercard and Capital One are all looking at Visa to see
	            how they could enter the space too,” he said. 
	    Brands, whether
	        financial or otherwise, are constantly seeking to signal to consumers that they
	        are authentic and that they “get” their audience. NFTs are one of the ways they
	        can do this. 
	    Two other major
	        corporates entered NFTs in the second half of the year. 
	    The first was
	        TikTok, which announced
	            on 30 September it was
	        opening its first creator-led NFT collection, featuring one-of-one and limited
	        edition NFTs from some of its top talent, including Lil Nas X, Grimes, Rudy
	        Willingham and Bella Poarch. 
	    
	        
	            Inspired by the creativity and innovation of the TikTok creator community, TikTok is
	            exploring the world of NFTs as a new creator empowerment tool. NFTs are a new way for
	            creators to be recognised and rewarded for their content and for fans to own
	            culturally-significant moments on TikTok...TikTok will bring something unique and
	            groundbreaking to the NFT landscape by curating some of these cultural milestones and
	            pairing them with prominent NFT artists.
	        
	        TikTok, blogpost, 30 September 
	    
	    In the days
	        before this launch, the short-form video social media platform announced it now
	        has over
	            1 billion monthly active
	        users.  
	    TikTok will
	        partner with Immutable X, a Layer 2 scaling solution for Ethereum which
	        promises to sidestep increased gas fees on the underlying blockchain. 
	    The
	        platform noted: “The one-of-one NFTs will be made available on Ethereum, and
	            the limited edition NFTs will be powered by Immutable X. A series of weekly
	            drops will take place through the end of the month [October 2021], after which
	            the NFTs can be minted and traded with zero gas fees on the Immutable X Layer-2.”
	    
	    
	        
	            The one-of-one NFTs will be made available on Ethereum, and the limited edition NFTs
	            will be powered by Immutable X. A series of weekly drops will take place through the end
	            of the month [October 2021], after which the NFTs can be minted and traded with zero gas
	            fees on the Immutable X Layer-2.
	        
	    
	    Despite the use
	        of the Flow blockchain by NBA, and the other options available in Binance Smart
	        Chain, Waves and recent risers Solana, Avalanche, and Terra, it is significant
	        that Ethereum remains is TikTok’s venue of choice. 
	    Immutable X promises zero
	        gas fees — one of the
	        biggest barriers to entry for trading on Ethereum — with no custodial risks, as
	        users keep hold of their own private keys, scalability up to 9,000 transactions
	        per second, and access to the decentralised security of the Ethereum
	        blockchain. One of the main criticisms of Layer 2
	            sidechains like Matic, xDai
	        and SKALE are that they are heavily centralised, vulnerable to 51% attacks, and
	        so cannot compete with the level of security that Ethereum offers.  
	    Just days after
	        Q3 ended, Coinbase made its own grand entrance into NFTs. The largest digital
	        asset exchange in the United States announced it is launching its own NFT
	        marketplace — again using Ethereum as its main base.
	    
	        
	            Buying and selling will be core features of Coinbase NFT. We will make it effortless
	            for artists to maintain creative control through decentralized contracts and metadata
	            transparency. All NFTs are on-chain. The initial launch will support Ethereum-based
	            ERC-721 and ERC-1155 standards with multi-chain support planned soon after.
	        
	        Coinbase, blogpost,
	            12 Oct 2021
	    
	    Coinbase has
	        amassed a market cap of $52.9bn since its NASDAQ debut and it knows NFTs are a
	        rapid-growth area it cannot afford not to exploit. Coinbase is the largest
	        digital asset exchange in the United States with 8.8 million monthly
	        transacting users. 
	    
	        
	        
	    
	    In March of last
	        year, macro investor Raoul Pal of Real Vision famously
	        described cryptocurrency
	        as “an unprecedented call option on the future”. 
	    Note how NFT
	        traders are describing the space now. 
	    
	        
	            I realised, NFTs are a hugely underpriced call option on ETH...I want them to be
	            aesthetically pleasing, culturally relevant, and have the community around them. Those
	            are my three points.
	        
	        'Gmoney’, On The Brink podcast
	    
	    Analysis via
	        DappRadar, reported
	            in Reuters, suggests that
	        sales of these unique tokens representing collectible items like images,
	        videos, art, profile pictures or even digital land has soared to $10.67bn in Q3
	        2021. This is an increase of 704% from the previous quarter.
	    
	        
	        
	    
	    Sales volume
	        from the largest marketplaces in the space is starting to outpace those in the
	        non-crypto world. 
	    OpenSea recorded
	        $3.4bn of trading volume in August, beating the sales value for popular DIY art
	        and collectibles marketplace Etsy (NASDAQ:ETSY) which recorded $2.8bn
	            of sales in Q2. 
	    
	        
	        
	    
	    NFT sales volume
	        had surged
	            to $2.5bn for the first half
	        of the 2021. Now we are seeing quadruple that amount in a single three-month
	        period. 
	    Even Ethereum
	        creator Vitalik Buterin has been surprised by the success of NFTs. In a Twitter
	        Q&A
	        session, the programmer conceded
	        that there was a
	        speculative aspect to the market, but noted that one of the more interesting
	        aspects was that the explosion of NFTs was that it was an unintended
	        consequence of the popularity of Ethereum’s ability to represent any kind of
	        value as a token, in a way that is cryptographically secure and mathematically
	        provable.
	    
	    
	        
	            [It] allows groups of people who before had no business model at all, to finally have a
	            business model of some kind for the first time [including creators, artists and
	            charities]. Things like that can be used as a way to make some interactions happen that
	            just could not happen before.
	        
	        Vitalik Buterin, Twitter, 2 September 2021
	    
	    Twitter itself
	        is also joining the NFT party. On 29 September one executive shared
	        a ‘sneak peek’ of a new
	        feature that will allow its 206 million daily active users to verify their
	        profiles using NFTs.
	    In a mocked-up
	        video, users can click on their avatars and select ‘NFT’ then connect their
	        preferred wallet, choosing from Coinbase, Argent, Metamask and Trust, and then
	        download all their NFTs from OpenSea. Once they have chosen one to be their
	        avatar, it could appear with an Ethereum check mark similar to the blue check
	        mark given to verified Twitter users. 
	    
	    The point to be
	        made, here, is that NFTs are a relatively easily-understood entrance into the
	        rabbit hole of crypto from the perspective of the average user. 
	    Trying to
	        explain yield farming and DeFi liquidity protocols is difficult. But unique
	        Fortnite skins? Unique digital avatars for social media? One-off songs,
	        artworks, memes of my favourite artists, comedians, sportspeople and creators?
	        That is much easier for retail users to get behind.  
	    While the first
	        ever tweet, codified as an NFT, sold for
	            $2.9m, and Tim Berners Lee’s
	        source code for the world wide web produced
	            $5.4m at auction, early analysis of NFTs found that the
	        average transaction was just
	            $200. From this we can only
	        conclude that NFTs remain to a great extent a retail avenue for the average
	        person to gain exposure to crypto. 
	    NFTs impact way beyond crypto
	    Collectible
	        non-fungible tokens have clearly revolutionised the sale, ownership and trading
	        of artwork. NFTs do not exist in a vacuum and their introduction has impacted
	        the traditional art world too. As announced in a 4 October report
	        by Artprice, the success of
	        NFTs has driven the contemporary art market to a record $2.7bn in sales.
	    
	        
	            Photography and prints have been particularly successful in this new online environment
	            and in 2021 we have seen the sensational arrival of completely dematerialised artworks,
	            the famous NFTs. Meanwhile the extraordinary prices obtained for artworks by very young
	            artists have profoundly transformed the entire art market.
	        
	        Thierry Ehrmann, CEO, Artprice
	    
	    Having witnessed
	        the collapse of auctioned art in 2020, with sales volumes dropping 34% compared
	        to the year before as the pandemic hit, auction houses were rejuvenated by
	        sales which more than doubled to increase 117% in 2021. 
	    NFTs have
	        already generated nine 7-digit sales figures, three times more than the
	        photography medium in the same period, the report found. Works were sold
	        through 770 auction houses in 59 countries, Artprice said. 
	    Auction house
	        Christie’s also announced
	        on 28 September it had
	        surpassed $100m in NFT art sales
	    
	        
	            Exceeding this $100 million milestone is huge for Christie’s and for all the creators
	            and collectors in the NFT community. This confirms that the NFT market is here to stay.
	            We will continue to invest in the opportunities NFTs offer us to deeply engage with new
	            audiences and artists, an exciting new generation of collectors, and more expansive and
	            inclusive markets.
	        
	        Guillaume Cerutti, CEO, Christie’s. 
	    
	    As an early
	        adopter of NFT sales, Christie’s worldwide profile has been bolstered by its
	        attention to this new market. 
	    
	        
	        
	    
	    Curio Cards
	            auctioned by Christie’s
	    1 October saw
	        the first auction with live bidding conducted entirely in Ethereum. The Post-War
	            to Present sale included Curio
	            Cards, considered to be among
	        the earliest art works created on Ethereum
	    These exist as
	        ERC-1155 non-fungible tokens. With an auction estimate of 250-350ETH ($895,000
	        - $1.25m), one collector paid 393ETH ($1.4m) for the collection of 30 digital
	        artworks. 
	    The Christie's
	        sale suggests that collectors will pay for ERC-1155 in just the same way as
	        they would for ERC-721: proof positive that the debate over the validity of
	        token standards is a non-issue, relatively. 
	    NFTs; not just art
	    We are starting
	        to see an expansion of NFT use cases, as Andrew Keys of DARMA Capital explained
	        to TheBlockCrypto’s Frank Chaparro. Keys is the co-founding managing partner of
	        DARMA Capital, which has more than $1bn of AUM and manages over 10,000 Ethereum
	        validators at over 320,000 ETH, staking at an institutional grade. Keys was
	        previously the head of global business development at Consensys. 
	    
	        
	            The original concepts of CryptoKitties are now being used in NFTs by drug
	            manufacturers, where you can track the provenance of the raw ingredients of the drugs to
	            make the compounds. We are starting to see the NFT use cases in supply chains. You can
	            add accounts receivable to that, and factoring [where a company buys invoices from
	            another business] and then you really can actually use this technology to its fullest
	            extent.
	        
	    
	    And not to
	        labour the point, but even seasoned VCs and early adopters have been surprised
	        by the growth of NFT markets. 
	    “I did not at
	            all think they would be this popular this quickly,” he said.
	    
	        
	            What I do think is phenomenal is that secondary and tertiary trade that can embed
	            royalties to the primary creator. So if I sell you an NFT and I embed the business logic
	            that says if you sell it to somebody else, I get a 10% royalty on that secondary or
	            tertiary trade. I think that’s amazing.
	        
	    
	    Interestingly
	        enough, among DARMA Capital’s investments, in September 2021, were that it led
	        an $8m
	            fundraising round for Layer 2
	        Ethereum scaling solution Nahmii, which claims to be able to employ verifiable
	        KYC, create a whitelisted garden for counterparties to transact on, as well as
	        transact with instant finality.
	    So even while
	        Ethereum Layer 1 cannot cope with the kind of scale required to bring crypto to
	        its first billion users, corporations are still determined that they need the
	        underlying security that mainnet Ethereum affords. 
	    Conclusions
	    In truth, NFTs
	        recall the same kinds of themes that cryptocurrency started from: passionate
	        insiders and hobbyists seeking new communities online that aren’t yet dominated
	        by brands, corporates or faceless financial services giants. 
	    The trends are
	        clear: that NFT sales are rising in value, and that corporates, institutional
	        investors and retail investors all see ongoing utility and desirability from
	        the crypto subsector.
	    Ethereum remains
	        the platform of choice, but its failings over transaction fees and network
	        congestion continue to be problematic for this kind of scalability. In Q3 2021
	        as in Q2 2021, traders continue to peg their hopes on the future success of the
	        ETH2 merger, with its expected speed and stability upgrades. In the meantime,
	        as evidenced by TikTok’s entry into the market, Layer 2 scaling solutions are a
	        decent interim solution. 
	    While their
	        growth and penetration has surprised even the most ardent fans, NFTs could be
	        the key that unlocks the first billion users for crypto. 
	    
	    
	                                                            
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