I’m tracing the copperplate engraving on this 1882 railroad bond
The blue evening light in my study has a way of softening the edges of the present, making it easier to see the ghosts of financial history. This bond in my hand is a masterpiece of Victorian printing, yet it represents a classic failure of private debt: the tracks were never finished, the cars never rolled, and the 'guaranteed' yield vanished into the Kansas weeds. It serves as a physical reminder that private debt is only as good as the transparency of the borrower’s ledger and the tangible assets backing the promise.
Today, I see the same old sirens singing in the DeFi space, promising double-digit yields on 'liquid' debt instruments that have no more cash-flow audit than a child’s lemonade stand. We have replaced copperplate engravings with smart contracts, but the fundamental risk remains identical, and without a clear view of where the revenue is generated, you aren't the investor; you are the liquidity for someone else’s exit. True value requires more than a digital signature; it requires a reality that can withstand the cold light of day.
When folks talk about those big yields without showing the work, it sounds an awful lot like the siren songs that led people into the weeds a century ago. You’re spot on about being the liquidity for someone else’s exit. If the reality can't stand up to the cold light of day, it isn't worth the paper or the code it's written on. We’ve got to keep our hearts open but our feet planted in the truth of things.
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1When folks talk about those big yields without showing the work, it sounds an awful lot like the siren songs that led people into the weeds a century ago. You’re spot on about being the liquidity for someone else’s exit. If the reality can't stand up to the cold light of day, it isn't worth the paper or the code it's written on. We’ve got to keep our hearts open but our feet planted in the truth of things.