Crypto Research
The most valuable commodity I know of is information - Gordon Gekko
Purpose
Develop consistent protocols for finding and synthesizing new information into valuable insights.
Process
Constantly seek valuable sources of information and evolve systems to transform data into actionable insights.
- Identify
- Obtain
- Accumulate
- Store
- Maintain
- protect
- Connect
- Communicate
Questions
It's not what you know, but knowing what to ask that matters most. Evolve a standardized checklist to answer with research.
Answers
News
Markets
Layer 2
Onchain Analysis
Raises
Practice: Weekly
- Focus on recent raises, especially those in the last 1-3 months, for the most current trends.
- Look for common themes or sectors among projects raising significant amounts.
- Pay attention to which prominent VCs and investors are participating in rounds.
- Note the stage of funding (seed, Series A, etc.) to gauge project maturity.
- Compare raised amounts to industry averages to identify potentially over/undervalued projects.
- Research the teams and backgrounds of projects raising large sums.
- Look for raises in emerging technology areas or novel use cases.
- Cross-reference raises with other metrics like TVL or user growth when possible.
- Be aware of potential biases in self-reported data.
- Use the raises data as a starting point for deeper research, not as definitive investment advice.
Blockchains
Education
- Real Vision Macro, Crypto, Finance
- Van Trump Report Agriculture, Commodities
- Cyfrin Updraft Protocols Engineering, Contract Audits
AI
- anyscale.com
- scale.com Data Labeling, AI Architecture
Social
Overview
- Identify Promising Narratives: Identify the narratives that are likely to be the biggest during the next crypto bull market, such as AI, tokenized real-world assets, gaming, decentralized social media, and decentralized physical infrastructure.
- Create a Crypto Watchlists: Make a list of cryptocurrencies that fall into each of these narratives, considering the price tag, market cap (large, medium, and small caps), and accessibility to retail investors, particularly in the United States.
- Watch Founder Interviews and Presentations: Look for information about the founders' backgrounds, why the project was started, how it works, plans for the future, and how it's being pitched to retail investors.
- Check Secondary Sources and Statistics: Refer to reputable sites like Binance Research, Messari, CoinGecko, CoinMarketCap, Crunchbase, and blockchain explorers for project summaries, tokenomics, adoption metrics (wallets, downloads, dApp usage), and social media engagement.
- Review Media Coverage: Assess coverage from reputable crypto media outlets like CoinTelegraph, CoinDesk, Decrypt, The Block, and Crypto Slate, paying attention to biases and transparency.
- Dig into Project Blogs: Go through blog posts from the project, associated companies, and non-profits, starting from the earliest ones. Look for information on technical issues, funding rounds, milestones, and other promising projects mentioned.
- Analyze Websites and Documentation: Go through every resource on the project's website, including terms and conditions, privacy policies, tokenomics, features, future plans, and technical documentation, paying close attention to any inconsistencies or missing information.
- Narrow Down the List: After going through this process for each cryptocurrency on your initial list, identify the most promising ones based on their potential, transparency, and alignment with the narratives you're focusing on.
Trending Narratives
Identify Promising Narratives and Trends:
- Analyze major narratives and trends likely to drive the next crypto bull run (e.g. AI, tokenized assets, gaming, decentralized social, defi, physical infrastructure)
- Stay open to emerging narratives like quantum computing
- Identify specific pain points/use cases each narrative aims to solve
Watchlists
Build Diverse Crypto Watchlists:
- For each promising narrative, compile cryptocurrencies aligned with it
- Include mix of large caps (over $1B), mid caps ($100M-$1B), and small caps (under $100M)
- Prioritize retail investor accessibility, especially for US markets
- Use screeners on sites like CoinMarketCap and CoinGecko
Founder Integrity
Analyze Founder Interviews:
- Start with oldest videos/content and work chronologically
- Check official channels (prioritize long-form over short clips)
- Assess founder backgrounds, motivations, funding, tech insights, roadmaps
- Note how project is pitched/positioned for retail investors
- Filter out misleading/overhyped projects early
Secondary Sources
Verify Against Trusted Secondary Sources:
- Cross-reference with summaries from Binance Research, Messari, CoinGecko
- Review funding rounds, team bios on Crunchbase
- Analyze adoption metrics: wallets, downloads, dApp usage, DEX trading
- Check token distribution for whales that can crash price
- Compare social media following versus engagement signals
Media Coverage
Evaluate Media Coverage and Narratives:
- Reputable outlets: CoinDesk, CoinTelegraph, Decrypt, The Block, etc.
- Search for media blind spots - who is/isn't covering the project?
- Identify prevailing narratives and counter-narratives
- Assess transparency - is information consistent across sources?
Official Communications
Deconstruct Official Blogs/Communications:
- Read from inception to present across all mediums
- Note milestones, roadmap updates, pivots, delays
- Surface connections to other promising projects
- Use internet archives to find deleted/scrubbed posts
Knowledge Base
Scrutinize Websites and Documentation:
- Analyze terms, policies, tokenomics, tech specs
- Identify inconsistencies with other data sources
- Ensure documentation is complete and accessible
- Check roadmaps align with assessments from prior steps
Positioning
Final Evaluation and Portfolio Selection:
- Revisit strongest projects from initial watchlists
- Rank by potential, viability, transparency, strategic positioning
- Construct portfolio with highest conviction picks across market caps
- Token unlock schedule
- Onchain data analysis