A fixed price coin whose value increases over time? Only in crypto.
Coming out of stealth mode Monday, crypto project Fragments is revealing that it has raised a $3 million venture round led by True Ventures, with additional participation by Pantera, FBG Capital, Founder Collective and Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong.
Co-founded by Pythagoras Pizza founder Evan Kuo, the project was originally designed as a gig economy token but has since pivoted from that vision to one that addresses a fundamental problem in crypto: the need for a token that can easily trade in and out of government-backed currencies. Kuoâs co-founder on the project is Brandon Iles, who previously worked as an engineer at Uber and on Googleâs search team.
The big idea behind the project, as described in its documentation, is this: âAt a high level, the Fragments protocol stabilizes price by moving volatility from unit price to unit count.â
But while that may sound complex, the idea is simple at heart.
When the price goes up, the protocol will automatically issue a new cryptocurrency called âfragments.â Some of those fragments will go to the wallets of existing users. So, a holder who bought one token and never sold would find more tokens in the wallet over time, even if they never made later purchases.
Itâs worth noting that emissions wonât go solely to wallet holders, though. They will also go into two reserves, one that funds future development and another that buys ether, ethereumâs blockchain token, to have ready when supply needs to contract because prices are falling.
Itâs natural to think that inflation and deflation tend to occur in equal measure, but Kuo noted that thereâs no theoretical limit to how much a currency can be worth, but the value canât go below zero.
And every time deflation gets triggered, holders come out ahead.
And because of this built-in incentive scheme, investors see the idea as one that could last.
Kuo explained that Fragments wanted a venture fund to lead its round in order to signal that the project is oriented around long-term thinking.
He told CoinDesk:
âIn the crypto world, things tend to move faster. With a venture fund, they are really looking to be involved in a project for five to 10 years, ideallyâ
True Ventures partner Adam DâAugelli also spoke to this long-term vision, telling CoinDesk that he believes the project will open up new business opportunities in crypto over time.
âEvan brings a unique perspective to this problem, which is to be fair to all participants in the market and focus on long-term usability,â DâAugelli said.
Itâs worth noting here that Kuo resists the stablecoin category, preferring to describe fragments as a âlow-volatility cryptocurrency,â but itâs hard to imagine the market wonât think of it alongside the other similar efforts, such as Tether, MakerDao and Basecoin.
âNot that this wonât be stable, but more that it is a holdable token as well as a spendable token,â Kuo said.
Pantera partner Paul Veradittakit told CoinDesk in an email that the firm likes the approach of âutilizing a reserve to help stabilization. The stablecoin segment is going to evolve quite a bit but this team should be able to navigate the waters well.â
Itâs worth noting that Kuo came around to the idea after he first considered building the aforementioned project for the gig economy. So, like many entrepreneurs before him, he pivoted to solving the first problem in front of him and held off on his original idea.
But to be able to work at scale, the company will need enough clout to register in the crypto economy. That will take capital if, for nothing else, stocking its reserve. (Kuo declined to say how much he thinks Fragments will need or how it would be raised in any token sale.)
âI donât see us raising an enormous amount,â Kuo said.
The most he would say is that it should be about six months until the project runs a testnet. âSince weâre not going to be launching a token in advance ⦠itâs just all about getting it functional,â Kuo said.
The first token will be a U.S. dollar-pegged fragment, which doesnât necessarily mean that future coins will be pegged to other fiat currencies.
Kuo concluded:
âIdeally, weâd like to be a stabilization service for utility tokens, because I think that would be the ultimate stablecoin.â
Wooden puzzle image via Shutterstock