Coin Ownership or Equity Ownership? The Real Question Is Being Asked Wrong
Original Article Title: more on dual token + equity models in crypto
Original Article Author: @mdudas
Translation: Peggy, BlockBeats
Editor's Note: Amid the ongoing debate on "whether tokens are equivalent to equity" and "whether the dual structure is doomed to fail," this article offers a more restrained judgment, emphasizing that the key lies not in the structure, but in the people. Mike Dudas points out that tokens are not inherently superior to equity, and DAOs have not proven to be suitable for carrying application-layer projects requiring long-term leadership. What can truly survive the cycles are teams with long-term vision and execution.
As the boundary between tokens and equity becomes increasingly blurred, the dual structure of token + equity is becoming a common choice for application-layer projects. As observed by institutions like Delphi Digital, equity is moving onto the blockchain, and tokens are also converging toward equity-like properties. Mike Dudas reminds in the article that whether this hybrid model can be successful ultimately depends on whether incentives are aligned and commitments are continually fulfilled — this is becoming a watershed for application-layer projects in the next cycle.
The following is the original article:
There is no simple answer or "one-size-fits-all" solution to whether the "dual token + equity" structure is feasible. But there is one core principle: you must genuinely believe that this team is exceptional and possesses long-term thinking — they are the kind of team willing and capable of running things as if they were leading a company for decades to come.
In many cases, I would argue that for application-layer projects requiring long-term leadership, tokens may even be inferior to equity as a tool. For example, you will see that many protocol founders from the DeFi 1.0 era have largely stepped away from the projects; many projects are now maintained in a "maintenance mode" under the governance of DAOs or other part-time contributors, struggling to operate.
It turns out that DAOs and token-weighted voting are not good decision-making mechanisms, especially in application-layer projects — they struggle to make high-quality judgments in situations that require quick decision-making and rely on "founder-level" knowledge and capabilities.
Of course, the "pure equity model" is also not strictly superior to tokens in any sense. Binance is a good counterexample: tokens enable them to offer fee rebates, be used for airdrops and permissioned staking mechanisms, and a range of incentives and benefits related to the core business and blockchain ecosystem... things that are challenging to clearly express and achieve through traditional equity.
The so-called "Ownership Coins" themselves also have clear limitations: currently, they are difficult to truly embed in a product or protocol for internal use. Distributed applications and networks are fundamentally different from traditional companies (otherwise, why are we doing these things?), and pure equity tools themselves are not flexible enough. In the future, it is certainly possible that some form of "Equity-Plus" token will emerge, but this is not today's reality; coupled with the lack of clear market structure laws in the U.S. to date, launching a "quasi-equity token" with direct value attribution and legal rights remains highly risky.
Anyway, you can imagine a world similar to what Lighter describes: equity entities operating on a "cost-plus" basis, becoming the engine serving the token-driven protocol.
In this scenario, the equity entity is not aimed at maximizing profit but rather at maximizing the value of the token protocol and its ecosystem.
If successful, this would be an extremely valuable gift to token holders — because you own a well-funded lab-type entity (Lighter has a token treasury for long-term development), while core participants hold a significant amount of tokens and are thus strongly incentivized to drive token value growth; and the core token design still remains crypto-native, on-chain, and distinct from a relatively independent, more complex structured lab entity.
In such a structure, you have to trust the team. Because in most current designs, token holders do not have strong legal rights. But if you don't trust the team to execute and create value for the tokens they hold a large amount of, why did you get into the token in the first place?
Ultimately, everything depends on the team's ability, credibility, execution, vision, and proven behavior. The longer an excellent team stays in the market, continually delivering on what they promised to do, the more "Lindy Effect" their token will become.
Assuming the team communicates well and clearly conveys value through buybacks, meaningful governance mechanisms, and the real-world usability of the underlying protocol to the token, you will see in 2026: even in the presence of equity/lab entities, the very best tokens will truly stand out.
You may also like

Make Probability an Asset: A Forward-Looking Perspective on Predictive Market Agents

Consumer application issues

Arthur Hayes: The flames of war in the Middle East rise, Bitcoin is bullish

Legendary investor Naval: In the AI era, traditional software engineers have no value?

More absurd than knowing about the war in advance is knowing in advance about the assassination of Soleimani

Key Market Insights on March 2nd, how much did you miss?

How to systematically track high-performing addresses on Polymarket?

From Stanford Lab to Silicon Valley Streets: How OpenMind is Solving the "Last Mile" Problem of the Machine Economy?

PlanX: Reconstructing On-Chain Execution with AI, Moving Towards a New Paradigm

US Judge Allows Binance Unregistered Token Lawsuit to Advance
Key Takeaways: A federal judge in Manhattan dismissed Binance’s petition to resolve a securities lawsuit through private arbitration,…

Crypto VC Paradigm Plans $1.5 Billion Expansion into AI and Robotics
Key Takeaways: Paradigm is setting up a new $1.5 billion fund to explore AI, robotics, and other emerging…

Ethereum Smart Accounts Set to Launch Within a Year, According to Vitalik Buterin
Key Takeaways: Ethereum’s “account abstraction” or smart accounts might be introduced in the coming year through the Hegota…

Bitcoin Recovers After Iran Conflict Shocks Market, Reverses $5K Fall in Just 24 Hours
Key Takeaways: Bitcoin dropped to approximately $63,000 amid tensions but rebounded to $68,200 within a day. Volatility led…

Former Mt. Gox CEO Suggests Hardfork to Retrieve $5.2 Billion in Bitcoin
Key Takeaways: Mark Karpelès, former CEO of Mt. Gox, proposes a Bitcoin network hard fork to access nearly…

South Korea National Tax Service’s Mistake Resulted in $4.8 Million Crypto Loss
Key Takeaways South Korea’s National Tax Service inadvertently exposed private keys, resulting in a $4.8 million crypto loss.…

Morgan Stanley Seeks National Trust Charter for Cryptocurrency Custody
Key Takeaways: Morgan Stanley has initiated a significant step toward digital asset management by applying for a national…

Solana Price Outlook: Major ETF Inflows Hint at Institutional Moves
Key Takeaways: Solana has experienced substantial ETF inflows, prompting speculation about institutional buy-in. On February 25, Solana recorded…

Bitcoin Price Prediction: Wikipedia Founder Warns BTC Could Plunge Below $10K — Should Investors Worry?
Key Takeaways Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales warns Bitcoin might decline to below $10,000, prompting a bearish outlook. Wales…