What Is Solidly Exchange? Features, Tokenomics and Price Prediction
DeFi

What Is Solidly Exchange? Features, Tokenomics and Price Prediction

6ในการอ่าน
2 years ago

CoinMarketCap Academy takes a deep dive into Solidly Exchange, the new DeFi AMM built on Fantom by star developer Andre Cronje.

What Is Solidly Exchange? Features, Tokenomics and Price Prediction

สารบัญ

We cannot say we weren't warned.

On New Year's Day 2022, Andre Cronje tweeted the following:

Now, almost two months later, comprehensive details of his project have finally been revealed. It is called Solidly Exchange and will be the first protocol-to-protocol automated market-maker (AMM) in decentralized finance (DeFi). It has the potential to start a new era of product innovation on decentralized finance, all thanks to the star power launching the protocol. Behind it are Andre Cronje and Daniele Sestagalli, two of the best-known DeFi developers in the space.
Cronje rose to fame with YFI, a yield aggregator service and one of the first DeFi protocols that kickstarted DeFi Summer 2020. Considered to be one of the most innovative and brilliant devs in crypto, Cronje hasn't rested on his laurels and developed KP3R since. Little surprise that the DeFi space is excited, but Cronje's Kobe has a Shaq in his team, too: Daniele Sestagalli.
Sestagalli, or Dani as most call him, is a prolific community builder that surged to fame with his MIM, Wonderland and Popsicle Finance projects that coined the term frog nation, a grassroots DeFi development focused on fair protocol development. Dani came under fire this year when Twitter detective-in-charge @ZachXBT revealed that the CFO of Wonderland, 0xSifu, was in fact a convinced fraudster, his presence tolerated by Dani:
The ensuing shitstorm didn't stop Dani and Cronje from collaborating on their new blockbuster project. Solidly drew a war for total value locked (TVL) on Fantom, and emissions is scheduled to start on Feb. 24, 2022. But what is Solidly Exchange, and why did Cronje dub it ve(3,3) in his Medium posts?

Join us in showcasing the cryptocurrency revolution, one newsletter at a time. Subscribe now to get daily news and market updates right to your inbox, along with our millions of other subscribers (that’s right, millions love us!) — what are you waiting for?

How Does Solidly Exchange Work?

Solidly Exchange is an automated market maker, a way for traders to trade without an order book model providing liquidity.
When AMMs first came out, they were revolutionary for their ability to offer a liquid trading book and trade without slippage. But the AMM market has matured quickly, and they are now a dime a dozen, as everyone and their grandmother can copy a functioning AMM and call it an exchange. However, Solidly Exchange is different because it focuses on fees instead of liquidity.

For instance, if you hold the Solidly token, you will be happy that the protocol is trying to maximize its profit (fees), which is why so many people are excited about it.

We still don't know how exactly Solidly Exchange will work. What we do know is that protocols will be able to swap stable tokens as well as uncorrelated assets. Cronje revealed that there will be a 0.01% fee on swaps, and interfaces will be compatible with Uniswap. Pool creation will be permissionless, as will be support for bribes.

What Are Bribes?

This is where the ve(3,3) meme comes in. It is a combination of the (3,3) meme popularized by Olympus DAO and the ve stands for the "Vote Escrowed" mechanism of Curve Finance. To understand bribes, you must understand what ve and (3,3) stand for (skip this section if you know both).
(3,3) had its peak in fall 2021 and rose to fame thanks to the Olympus DAO, a token backed by a treasury of other tokens that attempts to find long-term stability through this mechanism. (3,3) was the meme that symbolized the game theory behind Olympus' tokenomics.
In short, users can choose between staking and selling OHM, with a third option of bonding explained in our deep dive into Olympus DAO. If all investors stake, everyone benefits from the astronomic APY offered by Olympus, which counters a constant emission of new tokens. But if investors start selling, this can lead to a panic sale where everyone loses. In short, investors are caught in a prisoners' dilemma with the outcomes symbolized by their payouts: (3,3) or (-3,-3).
Many other projects forked the code of Olympus and its tokenomics, with Dani's Wonderland (TIME) being the first and most prominent OHM copycat.
ve stands for Vote Escrowed and is a mechanism introduced by Curve Finance, a stablecoin exchange to incentivize holding its CRV token for the long run. In short, CRV token holders have the same governance rights as all protocols. However, by staking the CRV token, you can receive veCRV - Vote escrowed CRV - which boosts your fee shares and voting rights. The longer you stake CRV for, the more veCRV you receive, but you cannot unstake your CRV before the chosen unstaking date.
Bribes are a way of accumulating more ve-tokens for a protocol. A protocol can essentially offer a user a bribe in its native token to receive the voting power associated with their staked tokens. You can read more about this complex topic in our deep dive into the Curve Wars.

So, what makes Solidly Exchange different from Curve Finance, and where do the bribes come in?

Unique Features of Solidly Exchange

The most distinct feature of Solidly Exchange will be how it uses its native token — $SOLID.

On Curve Finance, you receive 50% of the protocol fees regardless of which pool you vote for. You can vote for a pool that generates no fees for Curve, and you still get half of all the remaining fees. This is counterproductive for Curve because it doesn't incentivize cash flow for the protocol.

On Solidly Exchange, you will only receive fees from the pool you vote for. However, liquidity pools have an incentive to keep fees low to attract traders, which counterbalances a potential race to the top.
Furthermore, CRV emissions are predictable on Curve because they are pre-determined. Weekly emissions of the native Solidly token will depend on the amount that is staked. If no tokens are staked, the maximum is emitted. If all tokens are staked, no new tokens are issued. Moreover, the native token will be emitted without diluting other holders. Say you have staked 50% of the Solidly token, you will receive 50% of new token emissions. That is why it is beneficial to stay (3,3) - to stay staked.

Lastly, the staked Solidly tokens will be issued as NFTs. The NFT will function as a receipt of your position and will allow investors to trade it in secondary markets and use it as collateral, increasing the capital efficiency of the native token.

Solidly Exchange Tokenomics

The Solidly tokenomics will be based on the TVL of the top 20 Fantom protocols since the protocol is built on Fantom. Read our deep dive into the Fantom ecosystem to learn more about it. After the decision was revealed in January, a lot of money poured into the ecosystem to obtain a greater share of the future Solidly token. Based on the snapshot taken, the token distribution will look as follows:

Solidly also announced a bug bounty with bounties of up to $200,000 to get the protocol running smoothly as soon as possible.

Solidly Exchange Price Prediction and Future Outlook

A calculation through proxy protocols by Average Joe's Crypto yielded a target price of $18 for Solidly Exchange, giving it a market cap of $350 million. The DEX launched on Feb. 17, and Solidly's TVL reached $10 million quickly:

Most people expect this project to grow really fast and take the DeFi scene on Fantom to the next level. Given Conje's track record, it is highly possibly that it will impact crypto as a whole. However, with macro conditions weighing heavy on the entire cryptocurrency market, it would not be a surprise to see Solidly get off to a disappointing start. Few protocols have generated as high expectations like this one. It remains to be seen whether Cronje's and Sestagalli's protocol-to-protocol AMM is the DeFi gamechanger many hope it is.

This article contains links to third-party websites or other content for information purposes only (“Third-Party Sites”). The Third-Party Sites are not under the control of CoinMarketCap, and CoinMarketCap is not responsible for the content of any Third-Party Site, including without limitation any link contained in a Third-Party Site, or any changes or updates to a Third-Party Site. CoinMarketCap is providing these links to you only as a convenience, and the inclusion of any link does not imply endorsement, approval or recommendation by CoinMarketCap of the site or any association with its operators. This article is intended to be used and must be used for informational purposes only. It is important to do your own research and analysis before making any material decisions related to any of the products or services described. This article is not intended as, and shall not be construed as, financial advice. The views and opinions expressed in this article are the author’s [company’s] own and do not necessarily reflect those of CoinMarketCap.
8 people liked this article