What Is an ICO?

ICO stands for “initial coin offering,” and refers to the creation and sale of digital tokens.

AccessTimeIconApr 16, 2018 at 11:44 a.m. UTC
Updated Aug 2, 2021 at 5:27 p.m. UTC

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ICO stands for “initial coin offering,” and refers to the creation and sale of digital tokens.

In an ICO, a project creates a certain amount of a digital token and sells it to the public, usually in exchange for other cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin or ether.

The public could be interested in the tokens on offer for either or both of the following reasons:

1) The token has an inherent benefit – it grants the holder access to a service, a say in an outcome or a share in the project’s earnings.

2) The benefit will be in increasing demand, which will push up the market price of the token.

Tokens, especially those of successful sales, are usually listed on exchanges, where initial buyers can sell their holdings and new buyers can come in at any time.

As a type of digital crowdfunding, token sales enable startups not only to raise funds without giving up equity, but also to bootstrap the project’s adoption by incentivizing its use by token holders.

Buyers can benefit from both the access to the service that the token confers, and from its success through appreciation of the token’s price. These gains can be realized at any time (usually) by selling the tokens on an exchange. Or, buyers can show their increasing enthusiasm for the idea by purchasing more tokens in the market.

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History

The first token sales appeared in 2014, when seven projects raised a total of $30 million. The largest that year was ethereum – over 50 million ethers were created and sold to the public, raising over $18 million.

2015 was a quieter year: Seven sales raised a total of $9 million, with the largest – Augur – collecting just over $5 million.

Activity started to pick up in 2016, when 43 sales – including Waves, Iconomi, Golem and Lisk – raised $256 million. Included in that total is the infamous sale of tokens in The DAO, an autonomous investment fund that aimed to encourage ethereum ecosystem development by allowing investors to vote on which projects to fund. Not long after the sale raised over $150 million, a hacker siphoned off approximately $60 million worth of ether, leading to the project’s collapse (and a hard fork of the ethereum protocol).

The DAO’s failure did not deter the increasingly ebullient enthusiasm for the new asset type, and in December the first fund dedicated to token investment got significant backing from old-school venture capitalists.

2017 saw an explosion of activity – 342 token issuances raised almost $5.4 billion – and thrust the concept to the forefront of blockchain innovation. Sales selling out in increasingly shorter periods of time fuelled the frenzy, and in the haste to get “in on the action,” project fundamentals became less important to would-be investors.

Along with increased attention came increased scrutiny, and concern about the legality of token sales came to a head when the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) put out a statement saying that, if a digital asset sold to U.S. investors had the characteristics of a security (ownership rights, an income stream or even expectation of a profit from the efforts of others), it had to abide by U.S. securities laws.

By the middle of the year, ICOs had overtaken venture capital as the main source of funds for blockchain startups as they flocked to what appeared to be an easier and faster way to raise a huge amount of money without sacrificing equity in the company.

Benefits

To the issuer:

  • Access to seed funding, much faster and with fewer restrictions than via the venture capital route
  • The opportunity to create new, decentralized business models
  • A base of participants incentivized to use and test the service, and a boot-strapped ecosystem
  • No loss of equity in the project (unless the tokens stipulated ownership sharing)
  • A faster funding process
  • More arbitrary limits to the amounts collected

To the token holder:

  • Access to an innovative service
  • Possible gain through an increase in the token’s price
  • Participation in a new concept, a role in developing a new technology

Risks

For the issuer:

  • Uncertain regulation (possible post-issue clamp-down, fine or even sentencing)
  • Unstable investment (a sell-off by disgruntled users could affect the token price and the viability of the project)
  • Little idea of who the token holders are (unlike shareholders)

For the holder:

  • No guarantee the project will get developed
  • No regulatory protection (investment at risk)
  • Often scant information about underlying fundamentals
  • Little transparency on token holding structure

Outlook

At time of writing, the growth in initial coin offerings looks set to continue. As the technology matures and the market gains more experience with the concept, and as investors become more sophisticated, the quality of the tokens and the viability of the business models are likely to improve.

Regulators will most likely pay more attention to token sales as the next few years unfold, perhaps even passing blanket laws – or amending existing ones – to protect investors from flimsy or fraudulent sales.

Meanwhile, new types of business models will continue to emerge, fueled by a new funding system and operating structure. The infrastructure that supports token sales will also continue to grow, with reputable advisors morphing into the “investment banks” of the sector, and new dedicated platforms increasingly enhancing the user experience.

CoinDesk will keep you up-to-date on the latest developments in digital tokens and blockchain project funding. We also offer quarterly summaries in our regular State of Blockchain reports, which you can download for free. And you can keep tabs on completed ICOs with our colorful, interactive ICO tracker.

Authored by: Noelle Acheson

Last updated: 16 March, 2018

This article was originally published on Apr 16, 2018 at 11:44 a.m. UTC

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