Polychain’s CEO, Olaf Carlson-Wee, highlights the differing perspectives of retail and institutional investors on meme coins, emphasizing the significance of virality in driving market interest.
Summary
- According to Olson, institutions perceive meme coins as speculative “gambling tools,” whereas retail investors appreciate them for their social and viral attributes.
- He suggested the concept of tokenizing social media posts to shift from advertising models to market-based monetization, enabling users and communities to benefit directly from viral content.
During the Token2049 conference in Singapore on October 1, Polychain CEO Olson delivered a keynote titled “Meme Coins are Information Markets,” stating that investors have distinct views on meme coins.
In his address, he noted that institutional investors often regard meme coins as tools for “gambling and zero-sum games.” Unlike major cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin (BTC) or Ethereum (ETH), seen as long-term assets, meme coins are frequently considered speculative tokens with insignificant intrinsic value.
This perspective results in institutions generally dismissing the fundamental values of meme coins, viewing them primarily as gambling instruments due to their inherent volatility and short-term price fluctuations. This volatility renders these tokens suitable for zero-sum trading, where one trader’s gain is offset by another trader’s loss.
This mindset explains why many large funds and traditional institutions hesitate to engage with meme coins, despite their immense popularity among retail investors.
Olson pointed out this sharply contrasts retail investors’ views, who are driven by enthusiasm and have continuously propelled the meme coin market upwards, even when institutional investors perceive them as high-risk assets.
Carlson-Wee argued that retail investors are motivated by the social dynamics of meme coins more than their financial potential. A popular meme transformed into a token may draw significant trading volume simply because retail investors decide it has merit.
As such, Carlson-Wee believes the primary value of meme coins lies in their social significance. They offer a fresh model of monetization fueled by community sentiment and virality. Unlike traditional tokens, meme coins often gain traction simply because communities rally around a joke, viral meme, or influential personality.
Polychain CEO envisions turning social media posts into tokens
Reflecting on the meme coin phenomenon, Carlson-Wee emphasized that monetizing social media influence has been largely inefficient, requiring endorsement deals outside social platforms to capitalize, as these platforms cannot share revenues directly.
Building on meme coins’ success, he proposed a radical shift in social media, advocating for blockchain and tokenization instead of the current ad-based model.
He envisioned a future where social media posts could be transformed into tokens, allowing users to earn from their content’s popularity and engagement. Each post could be minted, with sharing generating yield profits. This shift would replace algorithmic rankings with market dynamics.
By tokenizing social media accounts, users could trade these accounts, with transaction fees generated from reshares. For creators, a viral post would translate into substantial earnings, not just likes and follows, but actual income distributed on-chain.
Carlson-Wee asserted that this model could enhance the role of online communities, evolving them from passive observers to energetic trading venues where attention and influence are monetized at an elevated scale.