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How effective is the massive ATOM revival plan?

BlockBeatsBlockBeats2024/08/22 12:00
By:BlockBeats

This policy, which has been promoted in Cosmos 2.0 since 2022, has finally begun to make some progress.

Original title: "How effective is the grand ATOM revival plan?"
Original author: Tia, Techub News


Although Cosmos has recently been embroiled in a governance scandal, judging from its dynamics, from June to August, protocols have successively initiated proposals to join the Cosmos Hub consumer chain. That's right, this policy, which has been promoted in Cosmos 2.0 since 2022, has finally begun to make some progress.


It just so happens that LSM has been launched for some time since September last year, so we can also take this opportunity to analyze the data and see how much pledge liquidity has been released.


ATOM War has also gathered a wave of projects that want to apply for funding, and it seems that the first phase of promotion is about to begin.


With ICS, LSM, and ATOM War, plus a pledge rate, this article will take a brief look at the specific effects of the implementation of these policies.


Pledge


Data from CosmosOutpost


From the pledge data, it is terrible. Since the scandal of Cosmos governance corruption broke out on July 31, Cosmos has begun to see huge amounts of unstaking. About 3.3 million ATOMs were unstaked on July 31, about 1.7 million ATOMs were unstaked on August 4, about 650,000 ATOMs were unstaked on August 5, about 1.66 million ATOMs were unstaked on August 13, and about 8.1 million ATOMs were unstaked on August 15. A total of 12.11 million ATOMs were unstaked in these days, accounting for nearly 3% of the ATOM circulation. The ATOM price also fell from $6.15 on July 31 to $4.62 on August 18, a drop of 33%.


ATOM Token Price


Replication Security (ICS)


The main function of Replication Security is to provide verification of Hub validators for other chains in the Cosmos ecosystem, and to provide an opportunity for other small chains in the Cosmos ecosystem that cannot provide huge validator costs to share Hub security. These chains that share Hub security are called "Consumer Chains". If you want to become a Hub consumer chain, you need to submit a proposal first, and write down the cost you are willing to pay for becoming a consumer chain (how much transaction fee to give to the Hub, etc.) in the proposal. Once ATOM holders are satisfied with this cost, the proposal can be passed before it can officially become a consumer chain.


Currently, there are two chains that have passed the proposal. One is Neutron and the other is Stride.


Neutron is the first consumer chain of Hub, launched in May 2023, and its revenue with Hub is divided into:


· 25% transaction fees, paid in ATOM or NTRN

· 25% MEV revenue, paid in NTRN


At the same time, Neutron also airdropped 70,000,000 NTRN to Cosmos validators, accounting for 7% of the total supply of NTRN. Later, more than half (42,727,950) of NTRN were not claimed, and this part was transferred to Cosmos Hub, worth about 15.72 million US dollars (data on August 18), accounting for 0.08% of ATOM's market value.


Another consumption chain is Stride. Stride is a liquidity staking protocol, which has a lot of revenue itself, and the portion allocated to the Hub is also quite generous: 15% of liquidity staking rewards 15% of STRD inflation staking rewards 15% of MEV revenue 15% of transaction fees Partial Set Security Since all validators need to provide verification for the consumer chain, the rewards that the consumer chain receives from ICS usually cannot cover the cost of running the chain. People began to complain that ICS brought additional burdens to validators. Subsequently, Partial Set Security was proposed. Partial Set Security reduces the cost of ICS to validators by reducing the number of validators that must run each consumer chain. Validators can choose whether to become consumer chain validators. When the number of validators operating consumer chains decreases, validators running consumer chains can get a larger proportion of rewards. This proposal was passed on April 12 this year.


Permissionless ICS


Permissionless consumer chains are another proposal after Partial Set Security, which allows anyone to create optional consumer chains without governance proposals. This will enable chains to start faster and with less friction. Consumer chains can set some basic parameters, such as how many validators opt in before starting. Currently, the fees paid by consumer chains are given directly to the Hub, and the Hub may initiate a proposal to distribute part of the fees to the validators after receiving the fees. This is actually very inconvenient, greatly delays the time for issuing subsidies, and may be unfair to some validators. In the future, in permissionless ICS, consumer chains can directly set the amount of commission to be paid to validators, and perhaps there will be a direct payment function.


The permissionless ICS proposal is currently on the ballot and will close on August 21. Since switching to completely permissionless chain creation will require some refactoring of the codebase, although permissionless creation is theoretically possible, the current version of ICS still uses governance proposals to create consumer chains.


Consumer chain protocols in proposal


From June to August, a number of protocols have initiated proposals to join the Cosmos Hub consumer chain. Because there are costs to start a consumer chain, some projects have not been able to complete the subsequent steps even if they have initiated proposals on the Hub. In the past two months, the protocols that may become consumer chains released by the Hub official push are mainly Elys Network, KiiChain and Evmos. Except for Evmos, which has a slightly higher usage rate, the other two chains are estimated to have limited activity. So, from a practical point of view, it seems that this policy of consumer chains does not have such an optimistic effect.


LSM Liquidity Staking


Consistent, available, and deep asset liquidity is essential for any decentralized network. The LSM liquidity staking module allows ATOM stakers to tokenize the pledged ATOM into liquid pledge assets through the liquidity staking module. Its main function is to activate the pledged ATOM and enable it to participate in the DeFi ecosystem to increase the activity of DeFi in the Cosmos ecosystem and to make up for the low actual usage rate of ATOM in the ecosystem due to the ultra-high staking rate of ATOM.


The LSM module was officially launched on September 13. Here we mainly observe whether the activity of DeFi in the Cosmos ecosystem has increased after the LSM module is enabled, and take a look at the coin prices of these liquidity pledge chains.


Currently, the LSM module is mainly used in the three liquidity pledge protocols pSTAKE, Stride, and Quicksilver. Since the historical data of pSTAKE and Quicksilver are not available, this article mainly organizes the data of Stride.


The figure below shows the locked value of stATOM minted in Stride. It can be seen that since September 13, the locked value of stATOM minted has increased significantly, and then began to decline after the peak on April 8. Although it is a downward trend, compared with the price of ATOM that fell during this period, the number of locked ATOMs should not have dropped much, but the growth rate should have declined.


Data from Stride


ATOM token trend


As a liquidity staking chain, Stride's token price has also risen significantly since October, but it peaked in mid-February and began to fall, one month earlier than the overall cryptocurrency market fell in mid-March.


Stride token trend


pSTAKE token trend


pSTAKE also performed well, with a gratifying increase.


Quicksilver Token Trend


Quicksilver performed well in the initial stage, but due to the subsequent slow rise in TVL, the price of the currency also performed extremely poorly.


Overall, LSM has a significant effect on the consumer chain.


In terms of the number of pledges, the current number of Stride pledges is about 4,223,479 ATOMs, and the number of pstake pledges is 661,066 ATOMs, totaling 4,884,545 ATOMs. Since the upper limit of LSM is 25% of the total pledge, about 60 million ATOMs. Although it is an incomplete statistics, the tokenized ATOM staked currently accounts for less than 10% of it. Compared with Ethereum liquidity staked accounting for 32.34% of the total staked (liquidity staked is 11,043,280 Ethereum, total staked is 34,140,035 Ethereum), there is still a lot of room for growth. We can continue to observe the relevant data and whether there are relevant measures to incentivize LSM.



Atom War


Atom War is similar to Curve War. Since some projects in Cosmos asked Hub for ATOM funding (similar to loans), the idea of Atom War came into being. Projects that want to get ATOM funding can compete with each other. Holders of shares in LSM can lock shares to obtain voting rights to guide projects to get funding. This mechanism is mainly implemented through Hydro.


Demex, Electron Protocol, Nolus, and Shade Protocol are the first projects to compete for funding. Since the auction has not yet started, there is no observable data.


Summary


In summary, it seems that a series of revitalization plans are not optimistic, and the continuous release of pledges also reflects this to a certain extent. In fact, Cosmos' vision and many measures are very advanced. For example, some concepts such as shared security were proposed very early, but in the end, there were few benefits. (Of course, this is also related to the conditions of each project. The development of Cosmos shared security is indeed more troublesome.) But it has to be said that it is indeed slow.


At the same time, Cosmos also faces many problems that are faced when it develops to a certain extent - governance centralization. The community is also quite dissatisfied with Cosmos's xenophobia, gang-building, and wasteful spending. It may be that they have waited too long, or they are really disappointed with Cosmos. Even some Genesis wallets have begun to unstake ATOM.


I still remember that when Cosmos 2.0 was just launched, a group of people were enthusiastic and hopeful to accept various interviews. When I watched the relevant podcast video interviews, I was even infected by their enthusiasm. But sometimes, the facts are so cruel. At least so far, the results are not so ideal. Although everyone has been accusing Cosmos, they are particularly dissatisfied with Ethan, the man behind Cosmos. But I still believe that Ethan, who loves to wear skirts, wears hairbands, doesn’t shave, is very interested in currency, and hopes to apply the ecosystem in biology to blockchain design, is not really as bad as the community says.


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Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.

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