Aptos debut underwhelms amid questions over design and performance

In this issue

  1. Aptos: The bigger they are
  2. Sam Bankman-Fried: Reaching for rules
  3. CBDCs: Hong Kong hypothesis tested

From the editor’s desk

Dear Reader,

Its a moot point whether the financial crisis that engulfed the world 15 years ago was what gave birth to the cryptocurrency phenomenon. But its difficult to make the argument that the opacity of banking practices, which sparked the meltdown, didnt give crypto development additional momentum as people woke up to the advantages of transparent, peer-to-peer finance.

Its somewhat disappointing, then, to see a much-anticipated new project valued at US$2 billion launch and immediately draw accusations that its lacking in that defining essential quality.

Described by some as a Facebook spinoff, thanks to the fact that its creators are former Meta employees who developed Mark Zuckerbergs failed Diem stablecoin, Aptos debuted its blockchain last week to a chorus of criticism that its tokenomics were not adequately explained.

Time will be the judge of whether or not Aptos is a step forward for the digital asset industry, and transparency will be key.

Transparency has also been on the mind of Sam Bankman-Fried in recent days specifically in the form of regulation for the sector.

Its unsurprising that SBF, as chief of one of the worlds biggest crypto exchanges, should be calling for rules after all, regulation offers reassurance, and serious players in any industry need it as much as anyone.

His comments prompted something of a backlash, with Erik Voorhees, the founder of crypto exchange ShapeShift, among the voices accusing him of cozying up with the U.S. government.

Say what you like about the 30-year-old FTX founder, but his reply was a sign of both his own maturity and the growing maturity of the crypto industry, a call to keep the dialog going and find a way forward.

Thats the most fundamental form of transparency there is, and its the spirit thats brought this industry such a long way during the relatively short period in which its been around. We welcome more of it.

Until the next time,

Angie Lau,
Founder and Editor-in-Chief
Forkast


1. Aptos: The bigger they are

Aptos logo layered in front of trading graph
The APT token lost more than half of its value on the day the Aptos blockchain was launched. Image: Canva

By the numbers: Aptos 5,000% increase in Google search volume.

Despite a lack of transparency around its tokenomics and low transaction speeds at its mainnet launch, the Aptos blockchains APT token remains one of the 50-biggest cryptocurrencies by market capitalization.

  • Aptos announced the launch of its mainnet last week, having received an injection of capital from including a16z, Binance and FTX.
  • Aptoss APT token was valued at US$13.73 on Oct. 19 at the networks launch, but it plunged to US$6.75 the same day as the so-called Solana killer blockchain averaged just 20 transactions per second (TPS).
  • Despite claiming to reach 100,000 TPS on its finalized version, Aptos is currently averaging 14.13 TPS, lower than the Ethereum networks current 23 TPS.
  • Following the launch, a Twitter user who claims to work as Paradigm Engineer #420 tweeted: Aptos is broken, saying it was operating at a lower TPS rate than Bitcoin and that a majority of tokens are either staked or ready to be dumped on retail investors.
  • Crypto market commentator Jordan Fish, also known as Cobie, took to Twitter to criticize exchanges listing APT for what he said was a lack of transparency, saying: It’s not great that FTX/Binance, etc are all listing Aptos without any tokenomics transparency at all. 
  • Fish added a screenshot of a page from FTXs website to his thread, which stated that the emissions schedule and total supply of the Aptos blockchain have not yet been released.
  • APT is currently the 48th-largest crypto by market cap and was trading at US$9.19 as of midweek Asia time, according to CoinGecko.

Forkast.Insights | What does it mean?

New crypto tokens launch all the time, but none has garnered quite as much attention this year as Aptos. There are two reasons for that. 

The first is that Aptos has been backed by some of the biggest names in the industry, which many hoped would be a guarantee of its success. The second, and perhaps more accurate reason for the hubris around Aptos is cryptos aching need these days for a success story. 

The factors that gave rise to the last crypto boom low interest rates, a rebounding global economy and a thirst for exotic assets among investors have all but disappeared. Market capitalization is down across the board, and the hype around NFTs has been pronounced dead by much of the worlds media.

Aptos, whether by choice or bad timing, launched at a moment when almost every investor in crypto was on a losing streak. People needed a winner, and people needed Aptos to be it. The cryptocurrency is riddled with bugs and flaws, but so is every major crypto at launch, even those merely undergoing updates to their underlying software. Building tokens in simulated environments, as crypto developers must do, only ever gives them half of the full picture of how theyll perform in the real world. 


2. SBFs big ideas

SBF: FTX CEO Sam Bankman-FriedSBF: FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried
Sam Bankman-Fried is vocally advocating regulation for the crypto industry. Image: FTX

By the numbers: Sam Bankman-Fried over 5,000% increase in Google search volume.

Sam Bankman-Fried, founder and chief executive of crypto exchange FTX, recently shared his thoughts on crypto regulations, advocating blocklists to ensure financial compliance.

  • The proposals, along with a set of possible digital asset industry standards, are part of Bankman-Frieds efforts to persuade U.S. regulators to adopt rules for the industry that would favor crypto companies and innovation.
  • Bankman-Fried said the industry needed changes in three key areas: regulatory oversight and customer protection, an open, free economy, where peer-to-peer transfers, code, validators, are presumptively free, and a need to establish regulations.
  • First, it means that we have blocklists and not allowlists for illicit financial activity, he wrote, arguing that a list of addresses associated with illicit activity can simultaneously enforce sanctions compliance effectively, without requiring know-your-customer verification for everyday purchases. Peer-to-peer transfers should generally be free as long as they’re not going to sanctioned actors.
  • Bankman-Fried’s proposal generated a significant backlash, including criticism from Erik Voorhees, founder of crypto exchange ShapeShift, who responded: You can advocate Effective Altruism, or you can advocate banning 80 million innocent Iranians from the future of global finance, adding that glorifying OFAC in proposed crypto industry standards is a non-starter.
  • Acknowledging the feedback, Bankman-Fried replied that validators and smart contracts should be permissionless and free, adding that he had sympathy for innocent people caught in broader blocks thats a policy conversation worth having.
  • In his initial proposals, Bankman-Fried suggested a community standard that required attackers to return the vast majority of assets in an effort to reduce the impact of crypto hacks and security breaches.
  • He also said digital assets need more public disclosures and transparency, along with standards to help inform and protect customers.
  • Bankman-Fried wrote that decentralized finance (DeFi) was among the most challenging parts of the ecosystem. The most important thing is that we not jump the gun: that industry, regulators, and lawmakers work collaboratively and thoughtfully together.
  • His final suggestions concerned stablecoins, and he asked for more regulatory oversight, up-to-date public information, and audits to confirm that dollar-backed stablecoins are, in fact, backed by the dollar.

3. Financial frontier

BIS logo beside Hong Kong flagBIS logo beside Hong Kong flag
Hong Kongs non-central bank currency issuance system made the city a natural choice for exploring CBDC-backed stablecoins. Image: Canva

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) Innovation Hub Centre Hong Kong SAR has completed a central bank digital currency (CBDC) study that examined the feasibility of intermediated CBDCs and CBDC-backed stablecoins.

  • The prototype developed in the study, named Project Aurum, provides a solid basis for further exploration and testing of Hong Kongs retail CBDC, e-HKD, the bank said in a recent report.
  • The study was conducted in collaboration with the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) and the Hong Kong Applied Science and Technology Research Institute, and a prototype was completed in July, according to the BIS.
  • Bringing CBDC-backed stablecoins to life has never been done before and we, therefore, felt that doing so may supplement the growing body of research on private sector stablecoins, the BIS wrote in its report.
  • Last month, HKMA Chief Executive Eddie Yue shared plans for a series of e-HKD trials in the fourth quarter of this year that would involve participation by banks and technology companies. The trials will seek to determine the most suitable uses for the e-HKD.
  • The HKMA updated its CBDC roadmap in September, highlighting that it first plans to launch a wholesale e-HKD platform for exploring CBDC uses before e-HKDs final public launch.

Forkast.Insights | What does it mean?

There are several reasons why the BIS chose to develop the prototype in Hong Kong: the citys ambitions for fintech innovation, its international connectivity, and its unusual currency system make it an ideal testbed for CBDCs.

Specifically, the BIS said that Project Aurum was set up to explore CBDC-backed stablecoins because of their close similarities with the Hong Kong currency system, in which physical bills are issued by three banks rather than by the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, the citys de facto central bank. It described CBDC-backed stablecoins as digital equivalents of the citys note-issuing bank system.

China is also testing its e-CNY, the worlds most developed major CBDC, in Hong Kong. The Peoples Bank of China is trialing e-CNYs cross-border use in Hong Kong, as it has linked it up with the citys Faster Payment System, which allows easy and quick money transfers.

The new study suggests that a CBDC-backed stablecoin could address common concerns about the underlying assets that back stablecoins, although its unclear whether the monetary authority will accept the issuance of a private sector stablecoin backed by its CBDC. 

Julian Ip, a political assistant to Hong Kongs secretary for financial services and the treasury, last week told a conference that a well-functioning stablecoin could be beneficial for lending protocols and that the government would consider how it could establish a regulatory regime for stablecoins.

All of this suggests that while Hong Kong may have been a strong candidate for the BIS project, the HKMA and the citys policymakers will also have some work to do on the regulatory front for stablecoins to make its results a reality.