The idea that Layer 1 blockspace has become a commodity may be premature, according to Bitwise CIO Matt Hougan, who argues that institutional behavior tells a very different story.
Hougan pushed back on what he described as an “increasing view in crypto that L1 blockspace is a commodity.
According to the Bitwise executive, if infrastructure were truly commoditized, capital and development would be evenly distributed across chains.
Instead, the vast majority of institutional building is taking place on very few chains (Ethereum, Solana, etc.).
Networks like Ethereum and Solana continue to dominate mindshare, liquidity, and developer activity, even as newer Layer 1s compete aggressively on fees and throughput. Hougan offered a simpler explanation for today’s low-fee environment.
However, he cautioned that the current equilibrium may not last.
If blockchain-based financial infrastructure expands to support trillions of dollars in tokenized assets and on-chain settlement, today’s excess capacity could quickly tighten. Such an outcome could potentially reshape the economics of leading networks.
Prediction Markets as a “Reg FD for the Internet Age,” Hougan Argues
Beyond infrastructure, Hougan also weighed in on another contentious topic: insider trading concerns surrounding crypto-based prediction markets.
Regulation Fair Disclosure (Reg FD) was designed to prevent selective disclosure of material information to favored investors.
Hougan argues that prediction markets extend that principle by publicly pricing probabilities around major events.
He reflected on how hedge funds historically extracted “alpha” during pivotal legislative moments in Washington, D.C., hiring lobbyists and consultants to gather private intelligence from Capitol Hill.
Today, however, retail investors can track live probabilities on platforms like Polymarket, including markets tied to the potential passage of legislation such as the Clarity Act.