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Decentralised.Co
DCo is a research firm working with gritty crypto founders.
Our venture group is a tool to match growth-stage orgs with 50+ venture funds in web3.
Out of ~150 deals we saw this year, we pushed just 9 to the chat. Investors include names from Multicoin, Blockchain Capital, Dragonfly, OMVC and Standard Crypto.
Opening up slots to new VC funds.
DM to join.

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Dear Haseeb
Consider us biased but we think our writers publish some of the best literature in crypto.
Links here
Regards

Haseeb >|<Jul 30, 2025
Who's the best writer you know in crypto? (And link to a great piece they've written!)
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In the past, you needed a trusted middleman in the form of some wrapper to move HYPE from the EVM layer to the staking layer. @kinetiq_xyz breaks that dependency. @0xOmnia joins us in our latest podcast to explain how.
Timestamps —
00:00 - Introducing Kinetiq
03:26 - Hyperliquid Thesis
11:15 - Hyperliquid's Architecture
20:53 - HIPs 1, 2, and 3 as the Pillars of Hyperliquid
36:15 - Liquid Staking and the Road to Decentralisation
46:27 - Custody and Compliant Staking on Hyperliquid
01:01:21 - Builder Codes and On-Chain Asset Growth
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43 Episodes, 50k downloads and 1.4 million minutes of streamtime later - we think it is time to open our podcast for sponsored collaborations. Here’s a brief on how it evolved.
Text grabs nuance, but struggles with tone. So we sat down with some of the best minds in the industry over the last two years to create a podcast we would want to listen to. None of the drama, all of the insights.
We've brought on @Arthur_0x to discuss navigating crypto cynicism with conviction earned over cycles. @AndreCronjeTech to share his plan for redesigning DeFi protocols entirely. @WClementeIII to break down his thinking on asset allocation.
Most crypto podcasts either get lost in technical jargon or lean too heavily into price speak. Our edge lies in combining an engineering background with macro and equity research and years of long-form writing in crypto.
We ask the right questions. We try to hit a balance.
We are building the podcast that we would want to see in the world. What if you could engage with the best founders and investors in candid conversation without the theatrics? What if virality were traded for depth? 43 episodes in, and we believe we have stayed true to that promise.
We're opening up sponsorship slots for brands that value substance over surface metrics. If you want to build something meaningful with us, slide into our DMs.

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The Coming Boom in Crypto Options
Robinhood went all-in on crypto this month, unveiling an @Arbitrum-based L2, rolling out tokenised US equities for anyone with a wallet, and teasing synthetic pre-IPO shares of @OpenAI. However, the first crypto derivative it shipped was perpetuals capped at 3x leverage, not options, which made @RobinhoodApp famous.
This single product choice captures a decade of evolutionary divergence between crypto markets and traditional finance. Traditional markets operate under CFTC constraints that require future rollovers and create operational friction. U.S. regulations cap stock margin leverage at roughly 2x and ban anything resembling "20x perpetuals". Options became the only way for investors with $500 to turn a 1% move in Apple into a 10%+ gain.
This led to explosive growth in the US options market. Nearly half of this activity comes from retail traders punting short-dated options expiring on the same day or by the end of the week. Robinhood built its business around providing quick, easy and free access to options and monetising it via Citadel through a model that’s called payment for order flow.
The Trading Gap
Crypto's unregulated environment, dealing purely in digital assets without physical delivery, created space for innovation. It all began with @Bitmex’s perpetual futures. These futures are unique in that, much like the name suggests, there is no “delivery” date. They are perpetual; you can open a position going up to 100x leverage on any token.
Options are more complex. Investors need to manage multiple variables simultaneously: strike selection, underlying price, time decay, implied volatility, and delta hedging. Most crypto traders evolved directly from spot trading to perpetuals, completely bypassing the options learning curve.
CEXes like @Binance and @Bybit_Official leaned into perpetuals to capture retail demand for leverage. Last month, perp venues cleared roughly US$3.7 trillion in notional value. All crypto options combined cleared just US$100 billion, less than 5% of perp volume.
@DeribitOfficial, the biggest crypto options CEX alone handles 85% of this option flow, highlighting how thin and centralised the market is.
Moving options on-chain looked easy on paper. A smart contract can track strikes and expiries, escrow collateral and settle payouts without middlemen. Yet, after five years of experiments, Option DEXes combined still capture less than 1% of option volume. Compare this to Perp DEXes, which process around 10% of futures volume.
Evolution of On-Chain Options
Options require a counterparty who is willing to take on asymmetric risk. If you bought a BTC call for $100K last year, and the price moved to $115K, the counterparty, known as the option writer, has to pay this $15k out.
They charge a premium based on how likely it is that you might make money, which they calculate using the Black Scholes formula. Higher volatility in the underlying token translates into higher option premia because writers need more compensation for wilder price paths.
1. The first phase of protocols led by @Opyn_ democratised writing by letting anyone lock collateral and underwrite options as ERC-20s and earn premiums. This let users trade options in a peer-to-peer fashion, but gas fees for minting these options burnt more than the premiums. Writers also had to lock the full notional value until expiry, so capital sat idle for months.
2. Builders next pooled collateral in AMM vaults, inspired by Uniswap’s design. @HegicOptions let traders buy an option with a single click while a pricing curve handled the math. The convenience worked, but the vault mispriced puts; one sharp ETH crash in September 2020 wiped out a year of LP yield and reminded everyone that automated pricing without hedging is dangerous.
3. Lyra (now @Derivexyz) tried to solve that by teaching the vault to hedge net exposure on perpetuals. Hedging cut drawdowns in half, yet the design relied on @Synthetix_io’s DEX liquidity. When the Terra–Luna panic emptied those pools, hedges failed to fill, and option spreads ballooned, making trading impossible.
4. Projects like @RibbonFinance tried underwriting calls as a way to provide yield. Depositors sent ETH to an option vault that auctioned calls expiring in a week. During the bull market, these premiums looked amazing, but when ETH slid, the income no longer covered losses and users were stuck with their positions until expiry.
5. Finally, Solana and Optimism teams such as @PsyOptions, @DriftProtocol,@Aevoxyz and Derive tried to recreate Deribit’s order book, matching trades off-chain and settling on-chain. They onboarded market makers who could prove tight spreads. But makers still had to post fresh collateral for every leg because the smart contracts couldn’t recognise that a short call hedged with spot carries little net risk. Liquidity dried up whenever those makers logged off.
Why Options Struggle
A market-maker selling a $120K BTC call and delta-hedging with spot BTC has near-zero net risk. Deribit recognises that and charges a margin on the combined net exposure. Most on-chain designs tokenise each option in isolation, severing the risk link. Every hedge ties up fresh collateral, so market makers' quotes get wider.
While Derive has partially addressed this by adding perpetuals to enable cross-margin within their clearinghouse, spreads remain significantly wider than Deribit's; often 2-5 times fatter for large positions.
Contrast that with @HyperliquidX, the DEX that now clears about 6% of all perp volumes and matches CEX spreads. Hyperliquid’s secret isn’t novel math; it is plumbing. A single global liquidity pool called HLP sits on the other side of every trade. Traders see one order book, one funding rate, no strike grids and no expiries. The cognitive load is near zero, and the UX is smooth. Longs and shorts take opposite sides of the trade. When net exposure gets lopsided, the protocol’s risk engine hedges on external venues or throttles leverage.
Onboarding new markets is equally painless. Seed a pool, list the asset, and trading can begin without cajoling market makers.
Options, by contrast, splinter liquidity across thousands of micro-assets. Each strike-expiry combination creates its own market with distinct characteristics, dividing available capital and making it nearly impossible to achieve the depth that sophisticated traders require.
Writers’ capital sits frozen until settlement, spreads stay wide, and the seamless UX that powers perps never materialises. This is at the heart of why on-chain options have not taken off.
The Missing Piece
Ironically, the infrastructure that powers Hyperliquid could be exactly what on-chain options have missed. We've written about Hyperliquid's approach to shared infrastructure, creating the positive-sum dynamics that DeFi has long promised but rarely delivered. Every new application strengthens the entire ecosystem rather than competing for scarce liquidity.
We believe that options will finally come on-chain through this infrastructure-first approach. While previous attempts focused on mathematical sophistication or clever tokenomics, HyperEVM solves the fundamental plumbing problem: unified collateral management, atomic execution, deep liquidity and instant liquidation.
There are a few core aspects to changing market dynamics that we see:
1. In the post-FTX crash of 2022, there were fewer market makers in the market engaging with new primitives and taking on risk. Today, that has changed. Participants from traditional avenues have returned to crypto.
2. There are more battle-tested networks that can take on the needs of higher transaction throughput.
3. The market is more open to some of the logic and liquidity not being entirely on-chain.
Options have the Lindy effect and volatility, but are hard for the average individual to understand. We believe there will be a class of consumer apps that focus on bridging this gap, helped along by LLMs that can check premiums and suggest the most attractive strike in plain English.




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The revenue meta is not a short-term, transitory conversation. It is the sign of a market trending towards efficiency.
Our latest story breaks down our reasoning behind this, with data from @tokenterminal
According to data from DeFiLlama, there are ±300 L1s and L2s. Of these, barely 10 have a TVL north of $1 billion. There are just as many with a daily protocol fee beyond $200k. From a price to sales perspective, Arbitrum and Optimism trade at healthy levels between 60 and 80. But consider the sea of protocols that trade above 1000, and you will understand why traditional allocators are now focused on revenue.
Enterprises like Oracle and Microsoft contribute to open-source software because they build products atop it. AWS may not exist if it were not for Linux. Google requires Android to fill the gaps it has in building mobile hardware. However, the same cannot be said about late-stage protocols today. The incentives to contribute code, talent, or resources simply do not exist. In the absence of wealth effects like the one ETH showed in 2017 (up ±200x) or Solana in 2024 (up ±20x from bottom), it is unlikely that the marginal token in crypto catches bids.
So what do founders do? They focus on niche, vertical markets where margins are higher.
Consider @maplefinance, for instance. According to TokenTerminal, they do $1.2 billion in their loanbook compared to Aave’s $16 billion. But the two of them do roughly the same in monthly earnings at this point in time. They are able to do this by pursuing corporate pools of capital and generating yield on Bitcoin. Niche. Vertical. Sticky.
Similarly, over the last year, @AethirCloud has done ±9 million in fees on revenue of about $78 million. They offer a distributed network of GPUs for niche use cases like training LLMs and gaming. They cater to a real, sticky and niche need which is often not discussed within Web3. In the process of pursuing that, they have validated that DePin networks can scale.
Why does any of this matter? In an age where there are endless assets, economic fundamentals will be a driving factor for setting a base price for assets. This has been the core thesis behind prominent liquid fund investors like @arthur_0x and @noahtrader. In the absence of these fundamentals, we will simply be trading hypothetical hopes and dreams.
An alternative approach is to simply focus on generating revenue and never tokenise. @AxiomExchange has done close to $140 million in revenue YTD. @phantom has crossed $394 million in cumulative fees. These are numbers unheard of in other industries. But given the capital velocity in Web3, it is possible to build a trading interface and capture fees so long as you have enough distribution.
Between the recent acquisition spree, revenue meta and assets being wrapped around equities, what we are witnessing is a great divergence. Between the old playbook of crypto and economically sound assets. Between playing perception games and having a base case for how an asset should trade.
Read our latest in the story for field notes on how we think the situation would evolve.




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Why is the market paying $2 for every $1 of crypto on a balance sheet, and what happens when this premium vanishes? We asked the question to @solstrategies_ CEO @LeahWald & CTO @maxekaplan. Here's their plan to survive the squeeze.
Timestamps —
0:00 Introduction
6:36 Sol Strategies' Journey and Investment Thesis
12:23 Market Dynamics and Fundraising
19:44 Why Sol Strategies is Bullish on Solana
27:38 Hyperliquid vs Solana
31:01 How is Solana Getting Better?
35:05 The Future of On-Chain Assets & Revenue Diversification
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Going to try telling our comms team - “why be viral, when you can be underrated” - and hope not to get fired for how we’ve been doing socials.
Thanks @poopmandefi.

Poopman (💩🧱✨)Jun 7, 2025
@Decentralisedco Turning the middleman cost, 3% into a mere blockchain fee.
Underrated article
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