Cryptographic treasure companies that store tokens could pass speculative packaging in long-term economic engines for blockchains, supports the co-founder of Syncracy Capital Ryan Watkins.
Digital cash companies (DAT) are listed companies that increase capital to acquire and manage the crypto on their balance sheets.
In a blog post of September 23 and an accompaniment thread on X, Watkins said that Dats already holds around $ 105 billion in assets through bitcoin, ether and other majors, a scale that few participants in the market have fully considered.
Its main statement: a small number of these companies can mature as sustainable operators who help finance, govern and build in networks whose tokens they hold.
Beyond speculation
Watkins said that most of the attention obsessed the dynamics of short -term exchanges – the value of the active value, fundraising ads and “what is the next throw” – which is missing the larger arc.
“We imagine that some DATs become for profit and listed counterparts with crypto foundations, but with wider mandates to deploy capital, exploit businesses and participate in governance,” he wrote.
Because some date already control significant slices of token supply, their treasury bills can be more than vaults; It can be political levers and products inside ecosystems.
He highlighted examples of cryptocurrencies where the scale is important: on Solana, RPC suppliers and owner market manufacturers who put more soil can improve the landing of transactions and propagation capture; On hyperliquidal, fronts that take more media threshing can reduce user fees or increase grip rates without increasing costs.
Access to large permanent pools of native assets can help these companies in Bootstrap and on a scale, he said.
Programmable money, productive assessments
Watkins contrasted these games with the Bitcoin strategy only of microstrategy, which largely concerns the structure of the capital around a non -programmable asset.
He continued by saying that in comparison, the tokens on the platforms of intelligent contract – ETH, soil, hype – are programmable and can be put to work.
The dates that hold them can take costs, provide liquidity, lend, participate in governance and acquire “primitive ecosystems” such as validators, RPC nodes or indexes, transforming treasury bills into yields of yield.
Structurally, he compared dat winning to a hybrid of familiar models: the permanent capital of funds and FPI at closed ends, the orientation of the banks’ balance sheet and the ethics of the composition of Berkshire Hathaway.
What makes them distinct, he said is that yields accumulate in Crypto by action rather than through management costs, which brings vehicles closer to pure parts on underlying networks than on traditional asset managers.
He argued that tools such as common capital, convertibles and privileged people give flexible funding dats to extend balance sheets, while chain yields can help manage this funding over time.
Winners and risks
Watkins warned that “not all date will do it”.
It expects many first generation vehicles – those who are heavy on financial engineering and light on the operational substance – discolour as the conditions normalize. As competition intensifies, it provides for consolidation, experiences with more exotic funding and, sometimes, imprudent movements of the balance sheet if the premiums pass to the discounts and the pressure versions.
In his opinion, survivors will be those who will combine the disciplined capital allowance with operational chops, recycling of cash flows in the accumulation of tokens, the construction of products and the expansion of the ecosystem. “Over time, the most managed could evolve towards the Berkshire Hathaways of their blockchains,” he wrote.