The next evolution in fintech will be regulated applications that offer seamless trading across traditional securities, tokenized assets, and native crypto. This framework allows direct user access to DeFi protocols like staking and lending from a single, compliant, and user-friendly platform, bridging the gap between two currently separate financial worlds.

Related Insights

The SEC's shift to "generic listing standards" for crypto ETFs removes the bespoke, lengthy approval process for each fund. This mirrors a historical rule change in traditional finance that led to a 4X increase in ETF launches, signaling an imminent explosion of diverse crypto products.

A complete shift of financial assets to blockchain is imminent. This won't happen on transparent chains like Ethereum, but on purpose-built networks like Canton. The key enabler is configurable privacy, a feature that allows financial institutions to transact without broadcasting their proprietary positions to the entire world.

Unlike competitors using crypto to operate outside regulatory frameworks, Kalshi's CEO views on-chain technology as a tool to enhance a regulated system. He envisions using it for clearing to improve immutability and transparency, enabling a permissionless ecosystem built upon a compliant foundation.

Widespread adoption of blockchain, particularly stablecoins, has been hindered by a "semi-illegal" regulatory environment in the U.S. (e.g., Operation Chokepoint). Now that this barrier is removed, major financial players are racing to integrate the technology, likely making it common within a year.

AI and crypto are not competing but are parallel, complementary forces reshaping business. While AI revolutionizes company creation and internal operations, Internet Capital Markets (powered by crypto) are fundamentally rewriting the external functions of capital formation, trading, settlement, and ownership for this new generation of AI-native companies.

The last decade of crypto focused on moving assets like Bitcoin on-chain. The next, more significant mega-trend will be the migration of entire companies and their real-world revenue streams onto blockchains, involving both crypto-native firms and traditional giants like BlackRock and Stripe.

The next evolution of finance will break away from the traditional "portfolio and search box" interface. Instead, trading will be embedded directly into new contexts and "modalities." Examples include trading via Telegram bots, placing micro-bets on live sports via a TV interface, or interacting with prediction markets directly within a news article.

While stablecoins gain attention, tokenized deposits offer similar benefits—like on-chain transactions—but operate within the existing, trusted regulatory banking framework. As they are simply bank liabilities on a blockchain, they may become a more palatable alternative for corporates seeking efficiency without regulatory uncertainty.

Multicoin's central thesis is that crypto's ultimate purpose is creating "Internet Capital Markets"—the ability to trade any asset, from anywhere, 24/7, via any software. This broad vision of permissionless, programmable finance is seen as the most significant long-term impact of blockchain, destined to supersede more niche consumer applications or "Web3" concepts.

After years of exploring various use cases, crypto's clearest product-market fit is as a new version of the financial system. The success of stablecoins, prediction markets, and decentralized trading platforms demonstrates that financial applications are where crypto currently has the strongest, most undeniable traction.