Solana’s Anatoly Yakovenko on Crypto's Next Era: Quantum, AI, and the Future of Money
(0:00) Introducing Solana Co-Founder Anatoly Yakovenko
(0:55) Crypto under Trump vs Biden, stablecoin boom, what it means for US treasuries
(5:56) Traditional exchanges using blockchain vs crypto-native exchanges, how crypto gets mass market
(10:02) Most exciting crypto verticals outside of finance: social, IP rights, real estate, CLARITY Act
(15:57) Quantum computing, AI’s impact on crypto
(18:48) Bitcoin: resiliency, market cornering, risks, future
(22:45) Ethereum, Visa/Mastercard
Thanks to our partners for making this happen!
OKX - The new way to build your crypto portfolio and use it in daily life. We call it the new money app. https://www.okx.com/
Google Cloud - The next generation of unicorns is building on Google Cloud's industry-leading, fully integrated AI stack: infrastructure, platform, models, agents, and data. https://cloud.google.com/
IREN - IREN AI Cloud, powered by NVIDIA GPUs, provides the scale, performance, and reliability to accelerate your AI journey. https://iren.com/
Oracle - Step into the future of enterprise productivity at Oracle AI Experience Live. https://www.oracle.com/artificial-intelligence/data-ai-events/
Circle - The America-based company behind USDC — a fully-reserved, enterprise-grade stablecoin at the core of the emerging internet financial system. https://www.circle.com/
BVNK - Building stablecoin-powered financial infrastructure that helps businesses send, store, and spend value instantly, anywhere in the world. https://www.bvnk.com/
Polymarket: https://www.polymarket.com/
Follow Anatoly:
Follow the besties:
Follow on X:
Follow on Instagram:
https://www.instagram.com/theallinpod
Follow on TikTok:
https://www.tiktok.com/@theallinpod
Follow on LinkedIn:
https://www.linkedin.com/company/allinpod
Intro Music Credit:
Listen and follow along
Transcript
Anatoli is the CEO of a little crypto project known as Solana.
One of the fastest-growing blockchains in the world.
As CEO of Solana Labs, he's driving Web3 innovation.
BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager, expanded its $1.7 billion tokenized money market fund to Solana.
Why don't we all switch to Solana?
The Solana sounds like it's actually commercial, and the other guys sound like they're antique.
Everybody in the world should be a customer.
Crypto will eventually win.
It's inevitable.
Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Solana co-founder Anatoly Jakovenko.
Here he is.
Oh, man.
Thanks for having me.
How are you doing?
Thank you.
Welcome.
Thank you.
How much of a difference has David Sachs made in the first six months as crypto czar for your industry?
Oh, it's been incredible.
I mean, I think it's night and day.
I don't know if the industry would have survived another four years of the Gensler regime.
The Genius Act, I think, is going to unlock, you know, people estimate $1 to $10 trillion worth of stablecoins that are going to be on public permissionless chains.
So if you kind of look at those charts, who owns treasuries, and be with China, Japan, et cetera, countries, right now I think Tether is somewhere around number five.
I think within five years the internet is going to be the largest holder of U.S.
treasuries.
And at such a scale that I think, you know, I'm an engineer.
I cannot honestly comprehend how that's going to change finance, but I think it will be transformative.
Upside, downside?
I mean, are there concerns there as well with that?
huge impact and democratization or are you kind of a
you know
libertarian let the chips fall where they may so to speak I think it's a huge opportunity to really accelerate American innovation and spread American finance around the world.
I think we actually have the best financial system in the world.
It's the most trusted, the most robust, the best regulatory environment for what it's worth as well.
But it was built after World War II, before the internet.
So its APIs are kind of like a fax machine-based.
What crypto is allowing, I think, is this new technology stack built on top of the internet internet that's completely Western-aligned.
It's for transparency, it's for capitalism, but now we can actually interface Western US-based finance to the rest of the world.
And I think America is going to benefit primarily from this, like more so than that.
It's just similar to our media business going around the world and infecting people's consciousness.
When you were getting Solana off the ground, how much of it was
a technical and architectural vision that you had versus maybe a set of trade-offs that you were trying to solve that ETH didn't fill or Bitcoin didn't fill, and you said, I'm just going to try and do this.
I think, you know, I can't speak for all founders, but
I think founders are driven by kind of a crazy vision.
They have to be a little bit insane.
So, my insane vision is always this idea, like, imagine finance 20 to 50 years from now, the science fiction version of finance.
What I imagine is a single giant ledger, a single computer for every market in the world.
That means it's available in Nairobi, New York, in London, in Singapore.
And all of these things are synchronized at the round trip time of speed of light through fiber around the world or through Elon satellites.
That's 120 milliseconds.
So a dollar can be in New York, in London, in Singapore.
in Nairobi in 120 milliseconds.
So velocity of money, velocity of assets are as fast as physics allow.
This is what nerd-pilled me on building this.
Like, it's a physics problem.
It's a massive
finance problem.
It's a really fun engineering, low-latency.
And did you feel that you had missed it somehow?
When I had my kind of Eureka moment and I did the back of the envelope calculation for design, I'm like, oh, this is a thousand times faster than ETH.
And when I started talking to folks in the ETH community, they're focused on settlement.
Settlement doesn't have these latency problems.
You can do settlement in minutes, and that's fine.
So I always felt that Ethereum being the world's settlement layer, Solana is the world's execution layer.
And
so far, so good.
Yeah, so far, so good.
Execution is where all the money's made.
So I think we're on the right track.
And
a fast execution engine can also do settlement.
That's kind of a feature.
You've been
super critical about two projects.
meme coins, even though they do throw off, I think, some revenue for Solana, and also the idea of a crypto strategic reserve.
What about those two projects
tweak you a bit?
I think primarily we could not...
predict what's going to happen on chain.
We called it blockchain and ASD speed, that was our tagline.
And the idea was always, how do we get stocks and bonds and treasuries and real-world assets on chain from all around the world to be traded by everybody around the world?
But it turns out that it is a much harder legal and regulation problem than it is an engineering problem.
But anybody in the world can create markets for anything, including meme coins, including NFTs.
And those things took off, I think, in part because of how slow regulation was to catch up.
Which makes it annoying that those are the things that come out instead of your true mission.
We saw Dina from Navdaq here yesterday.
She announced the tokenization of securities that we're going to trade on the exchange.
There seem to be a lot of regulated exchanges and businesses that come from that kind of deeply regulated background starting to experiment with blockchain technology.
Do you think they're going to be advantaged or disadvantaged given where they're coming from?
Does the lock-in with regulators, the relationship with the regulators, the lock-in with the market participants give them some leg up, or do you think that the disruptors are ultimately going to be able to operate more freely and more quickly?
This is the big challenge.
I think the advantage that we have that we are very nimble and we can operate everywhere in the world, the advantage that they have is that they're already regulated, they're already operating with those assets that we want on chain in the United States.
But they don't have global availability.
NASDAQ is still in this little sandbox.
So we'll see what happens.
I think once the regulators allow public keys like cryptography to manage and transfer assets, that's the interface interface that you can wrap around and
start moving anything from inside NASDAQ to Solana and vice versa.
Like once that interface exists, I think you kind of, the genie's out of the bottle, you know, the toothpaste is out of the tube.
Do you ever meet with the regulated exchanges and are there ways to kind of build integration and partnership that benefits both?
Of course, yeah.
So we've talked to folks, I think, across the spectrum from banks to regulated exchanges and regulators themselves.
Solana is fundamentally a protocol.
It's like an email standard.
It's a bunch of software.
The people that run it don't report to me.
I can't fire them, so I can't stop it if I wanted to.
And if we succeed, if the protocol is awesome and globally synchronous and super fast, NASDAQ would make more money by just running a Solana node and integrating with it more directly.
So, like, to me, it's ultimately a win-win.
We're never going to build an exchange that is onboarding US institutionals and serving US customers.
We want NASDAQ to do that and to run it it on Solana and that would be great.
There's a common claim by the masses, meaning
masses meaning not everybody that's sort of all in on crypto, that it's still extremely complicated to understand.
Even if it's like just minting and burning or yield farming, you say it to just like the norm core person and their eyes glaze over.
What's the turn?
in the abstraction of all of this stuff that makes crypto truly mass market?
I actually think that the human brain has to change to adjust to it.
I agree with you, it's really complicated.
But I landed in the States in 1992 from the USSR effectively, and there's no way my parents could understand what a web link was.
So it's all whenever you have new technology, it just takes people a long time to adopt it and build a mental model for it.
But now they do, they understand the web after years of using it.
So I think as stablecoins proliferate to the back office in a lot of companies, people figure out: oh, this secret key is actually really important.
I need hardware, I need PKI, I need trusted displays, all of the security stuff.
And they will build a mental model for cryptography having true ownership over something that is globally transferable.
I saw a chart recently that showed that the number of L1 and L2 projects keep growing year over year over the last three or four years.
Why is that happening?
I think because this is.
What need are they filling?
Well, I think the opportunity is so big to be the Google of finance, right?
If you're like the one place where all of finance, all markets run, that is a massive opportunity.
So I think people are going to keep launching L1s and L2s and all competitive.
They're all competing with Solana, and that's fine.
I love competition.
Until somebody wins it.
I think as long as we're laser-focused on improving the product, making it faster, cheaper, more reliable, we have a really good shot of actually becoming that global execution engine that's serving all of finance.
Outside of finance, what do you think is the vertical that has the most promise over the next five years?
In crypto or in general?
In crypto.
Whether it's for Solana or any crypto project, where do you think people aren't putting enough attention?
I think all the stuff that people have tried, it's kind of like early 90 days, experimentation, Frontster, all of those things failed until there was a critical mass of people that understood how the web works and then Facebook took off.
So I think even the weird experiments with NFTs being a way to create a community of artists to build a movie or story and create true new IP, all that will happen just five years from now or 10 years once we hit critical mass.
So a lot of false starts.
And somewhere in that graveyard, you might find some really good ideas.
Absolutely.
Just like what happened.
And then the social network concept always seemed to me to be such a a winner, you know, whether it would be like a dig or a Reddit format where you could vote things up with a cryptocurrency.
Your comments were somehow related to that.
And there were a couple of little experiments I remember looking at for investment, but candidly, I didn't think the founders would pull it off, and I was right in that case.
Is that the one that you think could break out if Elon put into X, Dogecoin, or put in Solana, and there was some sort of currency inherent to the objects and the behaviors?
I personally think that you could build a competitive product to TikTok with crypto if the magic, you caught that kind of lightning in a bottle because the monetization mechanism with crypto is so different than the ad-based one.
And the ad-based one kind of creates this forcing function for a lot of spam and duplication to ride to the top.
How would that work?
Just describe your product thinking there, that new kind of experience.
How do you think it would work?
I think you're kind of seeing some of these things play out with meme coins where you have creators that are associated with a coin that continues to have market cap and traction.
And now the regulatory environment isn't here yet to clearly tie the success of that creator to the value of that coin.
You need to remove a whole bunch of bottlenecks there, but the product exists.
People watch that particular creator stream and go buy that coin.
Once it actually looks like an investment thing, that Jason would be like, okay, I have all legal protection to actually put money in here.
I think that's a good question.
This is related to the financing question I was asking Neil and Ari about, which is can creators raise funding this way and then can they deploy that funding but then the coin holders can actually have equity in that project and in the performance of that project over time rather than it just be you know
if the regulatory environment changes like people have been dancing around this but like there's this project that I love Klanosaurus has these cute little dinosaurs that are they've like kids love.
It looks like a pixer dinosaur.
They've won awards for their animations and and they raised funding because they created this collective set of dinos now it would be awesome if those dinos could actually have copyright and revenue association in future but like we can't do that yet and that's frustrating but it could totally happen once we have enough clarity just imagine like we bought collectibles and if we all bought marvel comics when we were you know younger but we had equity in marvel and 30 40 years later those characters hit and you own it could be beast i mean it could be mr beast or it could also be the next creator.
Like, you're watching an up-and-coming creator.
You want to bet on this.
Is that the next piece Sachs is working on?
Is that the
Clarity Act is the big piece.
It's kind of a big piece of laboratory.
It's a speed for everybody, yeah.
So,
again, I'm an engineer.
This is from my lens, is raising money in the U.S.
and trying to launch a token.
We raised a seed in A-round.
It was about $14 million, which is amazing.
It was, you know, like
outright crazy success for a new, a first-time founder.
I had to spend two million of that on lawyer fees, which is more than 10% of my runway, to figure out how to launch a token in the United States.
And because I have kids in the U.S., this is my home, then we're leaving it, so I had to do it in America.
A lot of founders actually just left to do it outside of the U.S.
So the Clarity Act is a whole bunch of complicated legislation to try to minimize, hopefully, that cost to make it much easier for founders to launch.
It's far too much friction right now.
Our partner, David Sachs, launched a company a a few years ago that was trying to tie crypto to real estate, like a real-world asset.
Tell us about what that movement is all about and what the utility is that
is there if it works.
So
people want real-world assets on chain because there's demand for
in DeFi for non-correlated assets.
Like if everything that is in crypto, all this innovation around risk management in real time between borrowers and lenders.
It's useless because if everything's a meme coin, everything's correlated, it'll all crash at the same time.
There's no hedging, right?
And the only free lunch in finance is uncorrelated assets if you have true hedging.
So we need real estate, bonds, insurance, whatever have you that has
exactly commodities, but like even
California fire insurance, it would be awesome to put that on chain because then people could actually buy insurance.
All those assets, if
all those assets, if they exist in this kind of global synchronized giant state machine environment, can all be used together to reduce risk for the entire system because they're uncorrelated.
And that's actually the only free lunch you can get in finance.
So there's a lot of demand for them.
And the technology is there to leverage them.
Now we just need kind of the regulatory side to catch up.
Can I change tracks a little bit?
You're an engineer.
You work in cryptography.
Have you visited quantum projects?
What do you think is the state of development in quantum computing?
Everyone's got a different story.
How much is kind of hype in marketing?
How much is real?
And what do you think's going to happen over one period then?
Honest answer, I feel like
50-50 within five years, there is a quantum breakthrough.
And part of that is because of how fast data is.
Just define breakthrough.
You can run Shor's algorithm.
We should migrate Bitcoin to a quantum resistant signature scheme.
This is my bet.
And this is because we're just so many technologies are converging right now, and this asymptotic rate, AI, and how fast it's accelerating, going from a research paper to an implementation, is astounding.
So
I would try to encourage folks to speed things up.
My key for this is Google and Apple adopt a quantum resistant cryptographic stack.
This is the time to go migrate because because now the consumer side of it is effectively solved and you don't have to kind of.
So you watch where Google's going.
Yeah.
But yeah, I would, I think
the people,
you should be worried if you're in the field, but for the general public, quantum computing is such a massive unlock in terms of how much we can process that is going to be as big of a wealth creator if we pull it off as AI.
So I think this is, to me, like a lot of work, engineering work.
We have the right people to do it, but like for everyone else, it should be like a huge opportunity.
But to your point, the reports on the breakthroughs on the Willow project at Google are driven by AI modeling.
AI is unlocking a lot of the capabilities to make it real, which seems to be an accelerator.
It's pretty powerful.
What's the intersection of all of that world of just AI in general and crypto?
This is a funny thing to ask because I feel like AI is going to be everywhere and crypto is going to be everywhere.
But where those lines cross is just really, really hard to pinpoint.
I don't want to say something lame, like, oh, we all have agents sending money around, because that's kind of obvious.
I mean, I think the first attempt was to kind of say maybe there are distributed networks of compute and maybe we can run distributed learning or distributed inference, but those projects really haven't taken off and really generated any momentum.
Yeah, not yet.
And again, because they're competing with a data center that is all co-located, that is funded with traditional finance and those things.
And yeah, you can put those assets on chain, and that's a lot of ways how I think things are going to integrate.
Probably the most kind of like singularity bet we can make is you have an agent that is a creator, that is like an X personality that you can interface with tokens and buy into and pay for the GPUs.
That could be fun.
Bitcoin has turned out to be surprisingly resilient,
but now we're starting to see certain players
corner the market on large percentages of it, and that was never supposed to happen.
So
if something like MicroStrategy owns 6%,
that's actually maybe 50% more than that because there's so many dead coins out there.
Does that worry you, the centralization of Bitcoin, and does that mean there's an opportunity to start the game anew?
I think Bitcoin is resilient to these entities collapsing.
Now, it's not going to be without painful risk that in terms of people that own Bitcoin.
But the thing is it'll survive that.
And all the properties of Bitcoin that people value will remain through that transition.
So if you really value Bitcoin, you should see that as an opportunity to own more of it.
Even if somebody were to own 20 or 30%,
it seems like there are people who actually have this intent.
That's why I'm asking.
I think as long as it's an open global competition to acquire Bitcoin and anyone can participate in that, and we don't end up in some kind of regulated nightmare, you know, like you can't acquire gold or something like in the 70s,
I think Bitcoin would survive those kinds of shocks.
Is Bitcoin valuable enough now where
it makes sense for, I guess North Korea does this, but I was just going to generalize and say like state-sponsored ways of either trying to penetrate it, hack it, take individual accounts.
It just seems like there's an emergent trend here of this.
Its beauty is that it's the simplest protocol you can build.
Because it is focused on just settlement, it's very easy to understand from an engineering point of view.
And proof of work is kind of a, I don't know, it is a brilliant
elegance and simplicity and it's very robust to I think all sorts of attacks.
Now that doesn't mean that
you can't have an attack that could cause rollback that's unexpected, but I think it's extremely hard to pull off, very unlikely, and the internet is so superconnected that it can automatically kind of respond and take action.
I actually meant more just like you know states targeting accounts that have large Bitcoin holdings and trying to figure out who owns them and then just basically getting them to give them the coins.
Yeah, those kind of state-sponsored wrench attacks.
I think
what
we should do,
living in the West, is really have strong opinions about property rights and how important they are and how foundational they are to wealth creation in the West and America.
I completely agree with this.
And this is our best defense.
I completely agree with this.
And be hyper-transparent who owns the coins.
Because then it's like you can't take away something that everybody knows you own.
But when you try to hide your ownership of it, more likely it's easier for somebody to take it away.
I think privacy is a right, so it's somebody's right to be able to do that.
But I think our best bet in
wealth creation is actually defending these rights and defending the right of somebody to own Bitcoin if they want to.
It's extraordinary that it hasn't been hacked with so much at stake.
Maybe you could speak to it as just an architect yourself.
The reason it hasn't been hacked is because it's so simple.
And as an engineer, you always strive for simplicity to achieve a certain outcome.
You can't always achieve that.
Solana is much more complicated because the outcome we're striving is hyper-performance, and it's just hard.
So, like, Solana is much more complicated as a result of that.
But, Bitcoin is designed for a very simple settlement layer that is, I think, you know, the coolest thing, the coolest piece of software written in the last 20 years is, I would say, the Bitcoin Nakamoto implementation.
There's been an enormous
re-animation in the ETH market recently.
Where do you think that comes from?
Is that market-driven and speculatively driven?
Or do you think that there's a fundamental reimagining of where ETH lives in
you know between Bitcoin over here and Solana over here?
I'm honestly a huge fan of Ethereum.
I think Vitalik is an amazing person, amazing engineer, and has a very strong vision.
It's very different from my vision for Solana and it's really cool to see those two play out.
If I could predict what I do could cause a price change,
I'd be a lot more successful.
Well, you've been pretty successful, too.
But, right,
it's just really, really hard to attribute the wealth.
Okay, so look, your transaction network is quite liquid.
It's going to become more and more and more as you have more validators, more clients, all that stuff.
Um another market that seems has built a monopoly or a duopoly around transactions who's a little bit at risk is Visa and MasterCard.
What do you think about that?
My My
contrary opinion is that I think Visa and MasterCard are more technology companies and if you look at their like profit margin on the gross payment volume, it's like 10 basis points.
It's like vapor.
I think the
issuer and receiver bank, those are the most disruptible pieces on there because their profit margins are like 2%,
much, much bigger.
And Visa is a technology company that owns end-to-end the customer.
If they could remove the banks out of the loop and just do stablecoin transfers behind the scenes, I think they become a lot more successful and they can do a lot more for a lot less.
Long stable coins, short banks.
I'm not an investor, but maybe.
Jamath,
seems like a good premise.
I can't comment on this.
So that's a yes, everybody.
Everybody, short the banks.
Everybody telling you to do this.
This is financial advice.
Unless it doesn't work out.
I totally like the bank to everybody.
Thank you so much.
Yeah, it's an honor.
Appreciate it, God.
Appreciate it.
thank you so much thank you you awesome dude appreciate it