The crypto market values chains more than standalone applications
20 Maggio 2025 - 5:00PM
Cointelegraph


Opinion by: Hatu Sheikh, founder of Coin
Terminal
Although blockchains and DApps are critical, crypto industry
stakeholders often prioritize applications based on adoption
principles and revenue distribution. DApps won't function without
their underlying chains. The markets must uphold blockchains for
long-term value generation.
The value perspective is wrong
Blockchains and DApps should work collaboratively to coordinate
their functions for better usability. Instead, analysts create a
binary between chains and DApps based on Web2's structural
frameworks.
In “Fat Protocols,” Joel Monegro argued that
value within the internet stack comprises "thin" protocols and
"fat" applications. In other words, investing in the underlying
protocol technologies like TCP/IP, HTTP, and SMTP gives lower
returns than applications like Google and Facebook.
Monegro further stated that the value is reversed in the
"blockchain application stack." The underlying protocol layer
accumulates more value than the application layer, leading to "fat"
protocols and "thin" applications. He later
published an
updated rejoinder to clarify "application-layer success as a
requirement for protocol growth" and how value capture depends on
the total addressable market.
As apps become more popular, they attract users to the
underlying blockchain who use the chain's token to interact with
the app. Such demand pressure results in token price growth and,
eventually, builds a strong network where blockchains capture
maximum value.
A recent research report
demonstrated how revenue generation parameters like onchain fees
could flip Monegro's thesis.
In 2024, blockchains controlling 70% of the total crypto
industry market cap (excluding Bitcoin and stablecoins) earned $6
billion in fees. Meanwhile, DApps, with just a 30% market share,
made $3.3 billion, generating 35% of total onchain fees. The trend
continues in Q1 2025 as DApps recorded $1.8 billion in total fees
compared to $1.4 billion for blockchains.
According to the report, apps generate real value and user
interaction, as higher fees reflect increased usage rates. Since no
one logs into an app just to access a blockchain, people use apps
to trade, play, invest, socialize, and spend time. Thus, apps
generate value and revenue opportunities.
As apps are users' first interaction layer, they have higher
demands and more growth channels. The report says: "Blockchains may
have built the roads — but the apps are building the cities."
Recent:
Every chain is an island: crypto’s liquidity
crisis
But without “roads,'’ it's impossible to navigate and access
“cities.'’ Thus, such a value lens to evaluate whether the markets
prefer chains or apps is a myopic perspective.
Analysts and crypto industry veterans must understand
blockchain's critical role in running the crypto industry.
Consequently, the crypto markets must always support blockchains
irrespective of their economic value potential.
Blockchains are fundamental to crypto markets
Blockchains are the necessary trust anchor arbitrating
transactions for decentralized applications through transparent and
immutable ledgers. During multiparty DApp interactions, blockchains
act as a truth source for tamperproof records, making chains an
integral infra layer.
The chain vs. app binary argument is false because blockchains
are essentially timekeepers for dApp-generated data. Such
timestamped data facilitates all onchain transactions and enables
people to use DApps trustlessly.
It's irrelevant if a blockchain's value potential is based on
revenue and user adoption because that's the task of gaming,
social, and financial applications. Blockchains are the
foundational layer for building applications and other user
products that generate returns on investment capital.
Moreover, despite liquidity and integration challenges, the
steady rise of modular app chains is another example of the
importance of blockchain architecture. When resource-hungry apps
consume network capacities, app chains solve the
issue by functioning as independent blockchains to enhance
performance and reduce latency.
Using app chains to solve a network's bottlenecks demonstrates
that apps won't function independently and require the
corresponding chain architecture. Each modular appchain thus has
its own computational resources, storage capacities, and resources
to prevent competing applications from slowing down
performance.
These examples illustrate why crypto markets value blockchains
more than standalone applications. It's because apps won't survive
without blockchains.
“Value” doesn't always mean financial incentives and growth
metrics. Sometimes, value also comes from the market's recognition
of their cardinal role within the industry. In this market
scenario, blockchains will always be much more valuable than
individual applications, regardless of fees and revenue.
Opinion by: Hatu Sheikh, founder of Coin
Terminal.
This article is for
general information purposes and is not intended to be and should
not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts,
and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not
necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of
Cointelegraph.
...
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