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Ethereum's Identity Crisis is a Major Opportunity

The World's largest Ethereum bull just capitulated.

I'm currently in Nashville for our Portfolio Accelerator event. It's always a bit of shock for this quiet Kiwi to go from living in the forest and mountains to the middle of an American city overnight.

I suppose it's good for me to get out there and see what's actually happening outside my island.

But it doesn't make me miss New Zealand any less.

I remember coming to these conferences and everyone would approach me with my thoughts on Michael Saylor, Ethereum, and whatever shitcoin I was buying that day.

But these last few events, it's been silent.

So it didn't surprise me that the single largest believer of Ethereum, the guy that started the "Bankless" movement, just sold all his ETH and said he no longer believes in the vision.

But it gets worse.

Several of the largest members of the Ethereum Foundation, which is responsible for driving the network's growth, have left unexpectedly. And the foundation itself is selling their ETH like no tomorrow.

The institutional era of crypto is here and tokenization is coming.

But despite all the headlines that the media will tell you about BlackRock and JPMorgan launching Ethereum funds, this is NOT where the most amount of value will accrue in the coming years.

Ethereum is NOT Suitable for Institutions

Living on an island, I have a very simple life.

I love fresh food, hikes, and staring at mountains.

So when it came to something as bloody complex as tokenization, I just asked a stupid question.

What do the largest firms in the world need to make this stuff work?

The first and most obvious answer was privacy.

Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan can't be having their trades, collateral movements, payroll on Ethereum because everything you do on there is advertised publicly to the world.

I saw this tweet today and almost lost my mind.

Someone made a payment with a large Ethereum credit card and some guy on Twitter who saw the transaction and said "hey look at what this guy bought.

WTF?

That's the problem with Ethereum.

Everything you do on there can be tracked and intelligence firms can track down the person behind the string of code.

Would you feel comfortable letting me see your bank details? What you've spent on your card this year?

Now think about that from a bank's perspective.

It's a complete non starter.

So it's no surprise that the Ethereum Foundation is selling and the largest believers are giving up.

The tokenization mega trend is the single largest trend going completely unnoticed by the masses, and even when investors and the media notice it, they say Ethereum is the best way to invest in that theme.

Are you kidding me?

I don't know what these guys are smoking.

Tokenization is going under the radar, and so are the opportunities within it.

That's another reason why I've gone all in on this one idea.

Cheers,

Louis Sykes
Senior Crypto Analyst, All Star Charts