By Matt Hussey
3 min read
As the blockchain world matures, so do the tokens this new decentralized world is built on. We’re now starting to see tokens designed to serve more specialised purposes - above and beyond just a store of value, like Bitcoin. Two of the biggest new types of token emerging are security and utility tokens. But what are they? We’re about to find out.
Utility tokens are tokens that give you access to a product or service produced by a company. The idea behind these sorts of tokens is users will use them - and the services they are attached to - rather than hold on to them. In 2017, Filecoin raised $257 million by selling tokens that will provide users a way to access and use its decentralized cloud storage platform.
Because these types of tokens are essentially tiny slices of a product, the creators typically refer to the token sales as token generation events or TGEs as opposed to ICOs. Although the debate over whether ICOs and TGEs would be classed as different products legally speaking is ongoing.
Security tokens are tokens that are tradeable. The ‘securities’ moniker comes from the financial term of the same name, which refers to the name given to a fungible, tradeable asset that has some financial value attached.
A security token can represent a share in a company, a voting right in how the company operates, a unit of value, or all three. The key difference between a security token and a security is the token security is automatically organised and managed through smart contracts.
There is much interest in security tokens from the financial world, thanks to its ability to cut out middlemen from the trading process, lower the costs of creating and maintaining securities, and increasing transparency, thanks to all transactions being written on a decentralised ledger.
Perhaps the biggest and most important concept to understand about security tokens is that they are a type of token that needs to be compliant with financial regulators. As such, these token offerings have been called Security Token Offerings, or STOs, and are designed with institutional investors in mind.
This is just the beginning of tokens becoming more specialised as time goes on. Other classes of token are emerging. Privacy coins like Zcash, and decentralized coins are becoming a class of their own, too.
Security tokens are creating huge buzz around the blockchain space, as they suggest institutional investors are keen to get involved. If this happens, the value of the whole industry could increase dramatically. But for now, it’s still early days.
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