The "why" section was very weak imo. What are the benefits of this structure compared to a traditional fund structure for both the GPs and LPs in the fund?
It seems like a cool concept in theory, but most funds with international investors set up a Cayman Islands structure that makes the fund accessible to LPs globally anyways. Aside from the novelty of using a blockchain to raise a fund, I'm struggling to see benefits for either the GP or LPs.
@ntomanio
OK I'll keep it quick: programmable business. Business that works by algorithm, not by human. In the end, because of reduced friction, all humans win in an epic fashion. Friction = poverty.
In my own work I've been calling it computed value flows. What it works out to is being able to offer an incredible level of granularity by having programmed specifications for financial transactions that don't require any human interaction. This means that they will operate under certain known parameters with clear if-thens or other algorithmic judgements.
But by and large, people won't make these judgments except in a very macro sense. I imagine that @charlieshrem is working to create a set of algorithms for essentially routing flows of value. Oh, and yeah, I think it's pretty great.
People are an essential component of private equity. A blockchain token-based fund is not going to change the human element of PE.
I agree with you entirely. In the end even the crypto economy is about the desires of human actors.