cabanaboy1977 The OHM minted will come from the revenue of other bonds.
OIP-15: Add ETH to the Treasury
pipoctopus You will deposit ETH in exchange for OHM. As the treasury accumulates ETH, each OHM will be backed by a % of ETH in addition to other assets in the treasury.
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Though since I consider ETH to be a safe and productive asset, I make a distinction between it's volatility and it's risk profile.
It's a good distinction. I too expect ETH to be volatile in the short run and to perform well over the long run. But there are many ways you and I could be wrong. ETH's long term performance is by no means guaranteed. While I'm comfortable with my current level of ETH exposure, I don't feel the need to take on more through my OHM holdings.
The way I see it, we are buying the ETH with newly minted OHM, and it only costs us $1 to mint new OHM. Since OHM is trading at a significant premium to RFV, then we are buy ETH at a steep discount.
The protocol will pay upward of 15,000% APY on each OHM issued to bond ETH (assuming the OHM gets staked). This high APY comes from the dilution of everyone's OHM holdings and there's no benefit in increased RFV or liquidity. I wouldn't call this a steep discount
Seems weird that so many OHM holders would welcome ongoing dilution and a shortening of OHM's runway to get ETH exposure through the protocol treasury. Achieving such exposure would be costly and seems orthogonal to the protocol's purpose/flywheel.
kschan but how will the OHM be minted if ETH doesn't mint OHM?
pipoctopus The RFV per OHM now is about $22 (check the dune dashboard here), while each OHM is only needed to be backed by $1. This means our treasury has extra fund to mint OHM without relying on the revenue from ETH bond.
kschan ah understood so I assume that ETH bonds will dry up once that RFV has been assigned to OHM issuance?
You make reasonable points. I guess we are in somewhat different boats with regard to our desired asset allocations. You mentioned:
occam While I'm comfortable with my current level of ETH exposure, I don't feel the need to take on more through my OHM holdings.
Whereas I, on the other hand, feel underexposed to both ETH and OHM (maybe I'm late to the party). So adding ETH to the treasury suits me well as it allows me to gain exposure to two assets I want more exposure to. Regarding:
occam shortening of OHM's runway to get ETH exposure through the protocol treasury.
My hope is that in the long-run adding ETH will increase OHM's runway by increasing the treasury's intrinsic value well above it's RFV, and thus giving the market a reason to continue giving OHM a premium over it's RFV for a long time. This hope is of course based on my bullishness toward ETH, but I think the potential benefits of holding ETH if it appreciates substantially will outweigh the costs of obtaining it.
Too many replies for me to directly quote, but I'll try and answer the concerns expressed.
Olympus's vision from the start has been to become a currency backed by a basket of decentralized assets. That is part of our value proposition, and it has been from the start. This is not something the Policy team just thought of one day, this has been the plan for us since the very beginning. @occam there is no betrayal of Olympus's promises, because this was one of the promises. Maybe you don't agree, and that's fine, but if you read through the documentation you would see things are going according to plan (much better than planned actually).
Selling ETH is not part of the plan, because we are aligned with its ecosystem and it will open up partnership opportunities for us in the future. Living on Ethereum, while not holding ETH has its opportunity costs, so while it was beneficial to start of with stables, adding ETH now opens up a new chapter for Olympus.
@Aigur We are not trying to diversify the portfolio of OHM holders through our Treasury, you can do that better for yourself. We are also not trying to be a hedge fund, we aren't chasing alpha through trading ETH, we are using it to achieve our vision. We also won't be selling our ETH if it exceeds the target, as you can read in the proposal.
@e-gons Short-term, we chose a conservative target as we don't want to make big sudden adjustments to the protocol. We will continuously track the effect this move has, as we do with all the other bonds and assets. Long-term, it is an ongoing discussion within the Policy team, you are welcome to bring about any suggestions you have.
A lot of the other questions have been answered, if something was missed, feel free to tag me.
I misunderstood the ETH allocation point, reading the proposal as if ETH would be constantly rebalanced to 5% of RFV over a 45-60 rolling average holding period.
"Target 5% of Treasury risk free value (RFV) being ETH
Example: If Treasury RFV is 19 million, we would aim to accumulate $950,000 of ETH
Reach this target over a period of 45-60 days (bonds are not exact science, so we define a range)"
I am glad that at at this point we will not be actively trading or trying to dynamically re-balance Treasury assets through sales.
Regarding purchasing ETH as a means to 'achieve our vision'. This is could be said about any asset we add to the treasury. I think we should be more explicit. Why ETH? To be clear, I don't think its necessarily good or bad for the protocol to add ETH, I just want to understand why we're doing this. I care about the rationale because it speaks to the future.
There is nothing explicitly in the documentation about buying any particular asset class or token for the treasury, so the Olympus forum is the correct venue for these discussions. Treasury allocation decisions should be thoroughly presented and thoroughly tested/debated, keeping in mind that 'reserve currency' status is the project objective, not merely decentralised asset accumulation. I think the question we should always be able to answer is: how does this asset allocation get us closer to DeFi's 'reserve currency' status?
So, how does ETH (as a volatile 'ultra-hard-money' deflationary asset) get us closer to DeFi's 'reserve currency' status?
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@shadow +1 to all these points.
Olympus's intention, goal is not to be "a diamond-handed HODLer and LPer of targeted stable coins." Olympus aims to become, as you said, DeFi's Reserve Currency. The De-central Bank of Crypto. The base camp of DeFi. @e-gons Long term Olympus does "aim to replace pegged currencies for day-to-day transactions."
We want to make Olympus the center of DeFi. The central bank needs to exist at the base layer of everything... We want to put OHM in the same position as USD, BTC, and ETH; as a default currency to pair your token with. (1)
The current macro environment itself is an excellent argument for including in our reserves productive assets that insure and insulate OHM against the loss of its purchasing power.
There’s a strange irony to the fact that the most utilized cryptocurrency is really just a digitized dollar. While functional stablecoins may achieve a stable USD value, that does not mean they’re stable in purchasing power. Their real value changes just like dollars in a bank account, and that value is heavily reliant on the policies of the Federal Reserve and US government, and on the US economy. (2)
We can expand this beyond the Dollar to the rest of the world where in total we see Central Bank Balance Sheets expanding by $4.72 trillion in 2021... so far.
$4.72 trillion of money created out of thin air. It must go somewhere. The challenge is to procure the assets that will receive a slice of these funds. (3)
So, what should we do? Staying solely in fiat pegged/backed stable/algo coins isn't going to cut it.
The treasury does not have to be DAI forever. We are starting with it because USD is familiar and common, and we want to minimize complexity in this initial stage. Plus, DAI enjoys some of the highest yields in DeFi. However, down the road I hope to see Bitcoin become part of the treasury. I believe the best currency should be backed by the best money. (4)
Unfortunately, there is no way, at present, for us to get BTC on Ethereum without some form of centralization.
We live on Ethereum. We're secured by Ethereum. Ethereum is one of, if not the most productive assets in the world.
This proposal offers Olympus a very conservative means to begin accumulating a volatile 'ultra-hard-money' (soon to be) deflationary asset. The cost? A small amount of our Runway. The benefit? Diversification of the treasury. Ownership of the rails on which our locomotive runs. An asset that has, so far, outperformed as central bankers dilute our savings. Ethereum opens to Olympus another world of possibilities for adding value both to Olympus and to Ethereum itself. This is a DAO. We can choose to do with ETH whatever the community agrees on. Have an idea? Propose it. Concerned with treasury diversification? Join the DAO or, as you're doing, push back in the forum. Ethereum is everywhere and is here to stay. Owning it plants a flag, makes a statement, and gets the creative juices of the community going.
A final note on TaaS. TaaS is not meant only for stable coin projects. Doing so would limit its potential. We're in agreement, TaaS is awesome. Why limit its reach and its benefit to all of Crypto?
I appreciate the debate! And even if your side doesn't "win," I hope you'll stick with the Ohmies to help Olympus succeed where our sovereigns have clearly failed.
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If ETH is assigned a RFV of 0... what's the point of adding ETH?
Isn't the purpose of the DAO to grow RFV? Maybe I've been thinking about this all wrong?
I get this quote: "If this proposal passes, you can visualize the new backing of OHM as 1 OHM = $1 + 0.xx ETH (+ a fraction of any other asset we hold in the Treasury)"
But wouldn't that dilute the meaning of RFV? Maybe it's still the right answer. I'm just curious on your thinking.
Additionally, you mentioned the loss of purchasing power of the dollar... if that's what we feel (and I agree) then perhaps dollars shouldn't be 100% RFV. They aren't risk free. And the opposite is true to me as well... maybe ETH should be 0 < RFV < 1. Like maybe 0.02 RFV.
Hi Applesead, I think you're right, its a strategic play on the future use of the Eth.
In addition to everything Shadow, Aigur, JFry4, and others have said, (protecting against USD deterioration, stablecoin risk, having a basket of decentralized unhackable assets)... including 5% Eth in the treasury without minting is a long-term play. There's no need to mint more Ohm off of Eth in the short-term, the current runway is considerable and has been growing continuously through partnerships and bonding.
Some of the runway extension also comes from forced buyers and sellers during periods of volatility, when the treasury protocol gains Dai by picking up spreads. This was even visible during the last drawdown when APY shifted from 15k to 16k for one epoch.
Also, it's useful as insurance against the unlikely event of Olympus DAO price decreasing considerably, 90% for example, having more Eth in the treasury acts as a strong incentive for buyers of last resort. Whoever buys the dip of the dip knows their will have a claim on whatever Eth is in the treasury if things go really south.
If for some reason something very bad were to happen to stablecoins, this wouldn't necessarily impair Eth, so that helps as a hedge. Especially since many people would flock from stables to the nearest bankrupcy proof asset.
Finally, growing a 5% Eth position will allow Olympus to participate in Eth 2.0. There will be benefits in terms of both passive income, MEV capture (I'm sure others can explain this better than me), and having a voice in Ethereum governance by possessing a staking pool.
Even if over time we successfully migrate much of Ohm governance to code, it will be very important to have influence in Eth governance since Ohm is built on Eth and currently does not have any other safe harbors.
Cheers,
Fulano (Α, Ω)
About time, looking forward to ETH
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Love it, but why don't we want ETH-OHM LP to go with it like the others? Or is that just next in line?
As long as we account for the stipulation that Eth bonds are only possible when OHM>$1
I'm a bit late, but I was thinking last night, can we stake the ETH somehow to earn passive income?
decentralizedDoug Not on Olympus I am afraid, at least it is not laid out in this proposal. When you purchase an ETH bond, you are essentially giving up your ETH in exchange for discounted OHM tokens.
kschan sorry, i mean to say can the DAO stake the ETH and run an ETH2 node somehow?
decentralizedDoug imo this is definitely a possibility. Like how we have deposited the DAI in our treasury to AAVE to earn passive income, I can imagine we would do something similar/useful with the ETH accumulated from bond sales. I believe a proposal will be put up in the future if this is the case.