In the first Adoption section of the 2023 CMC Crypto Playbook, CZ, founder and CEO of Binance, shares his insights on crypto usage worldwide and what will drive the next wave of adoption.
CoinMarketCap sat down with Binance CEO and founder Changpeng “CZ” Zhao to discuss the future outlook for crypto adoption in 2023.
Measuring Adoption in An Eventful Year: 2022
CMC: In 2022, we’ve seen the fall of many big players — 3AC, Luna, Celsius, Voyager, FTX — how much have these collapses affected the industry in terms of user adoption? And how do you go about measuring adoption in general?
Usually, the way I look at the measure of adoption is actually just the Bitcoin price, which usually is a fairly accurate indicator of the industry.
Historically, Binance’s user registration rate, trading volume, etc. have all been very heavily correlated with Bitcoin’s price: that line is actually the same shape as almost every other indicator that we use. Right now, Binance trading volume is about a third of what it was a year ago, when Bitcoin’s price was near its all-time-high [of $68,800]. All these events have slowed down the industry, creating a negative impact.
Source: CoinMarketCap (Dec. 7, 2022)
The entire crypto industry goes through four-year cycles. Every four years, there's a bear market. I think we are in one now: bear markets have historically lasted about a year, and we are now about a year out from the last all time high.
Next Wave of User Adoption
CMC: What do you think the crypto industry can do concretely to bring on the next wave of user adoption? It is about building more user-friendly DeFi solutions? Is the solution regulating more centralized crypto providers? Are there any other avenues you see to bring more people on board to crypto next year?
It's a similar thing in crypto with DeFi, CeFi, wallets, faster blockchains, education, regulatory improvements, etc. All of those things will help. Regulatory clarity is very important: given the negative instances that happened in the industry, we have to become more transparent and build more trust. I think the industry will have to shift towards a much more transparency-based system, one that users can verify.
Given the issues with the centralized exchanges recently, more people will shift to DeFi. But then there will be a hack, there will be a rug pull in DeFi, somebody will have lost a lot of money in DeFi and then the people will move back towards centralized exchanges. The industry moves incrementally in many different aspects at the same time.
CMC: If you had to choose what would be more important for adoption — building those new products or increasing regulation and transparency — which one do you think has more relevance?
Rebuilding in A Bear Market
CMC: Binance is like a microcosm of the industry at large — you have retail users with the spot exchange business, you have institution clients with the futures product, custody and the venture side. With the different types of clients and users, which area will be the most challenging for the industry to rebuild trust in and increase adoption post-2022?
FTX was a big event. When it happened, Bitcoin’s price was around $18,000. Today, we are still at $17,000. Bitcoin’s price didn’t drop by that much — and Bitcoin’s price can drop by 5-10% on an normal day without any specific incident. The industry has been resilient.
CMC: We’ve all seen some bear markets. You've seen more bear markets than I have. What are the specific differences you've noticed in this particular bear market cycle compared to any in the past?
In 2017, it was just ICOs: and with ICOs, there were too many projects that wouldn't make it. In 2013/2014, it was just the Bitcoin industry: only Mt. Gox went down.
Each cycle, the industry gets bigger. With this one, we've seen multiple players go down.
Adoption: A Way Forward
CMC: Where is the next wave of adoption likely to come from? Would it be from new geographical markets (i.e areas like LatAm or Turkey that see high inflation), or new solid use cases (i.e. next-gen DeFi products, GameFi, etc.), or new participants (i.e. large asset manager/sovereign wealth, new age group users)?
I would guess as always, that adoption comes from new use cases, something that we haven't really imagined. Institutional adoption has been talked about for years and it will come. It is coming already, slowly, gradually. Binance actually does have a lot of institutional users, Binance Custody has a lot of institutional users. That's a very clear known use case and the adoption will happen at a certain rate. Regulations are coming at a certain rate, and those guys will come in.
The use of Bitcoin to hedge against inflation is a very clear use case. More and more people are learning about it and they will come in, because Bitcoin has a limited supply. We've seen that different regions do have different use cases that are more prominent. In some parts of Asia, trading is very prominent, just because there are more traders there. In the North American region, institutional traders are more prominent. In Latin America, people do try to use cryptocurrencies to hedge against inflation. In Africa, people use, earn and pay a lot more in crypto. We do see that geographic distribution differs to some extent, not completely. It's not black and white, but there's some different emphases.
I always think that the next hot thing is usually the one that people don't really talk about and have not predicted.
CMC: Do you have any New Year's resolutions for cryptocurrency next year?
This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.