Blockchain Native Protocols Get Creative in Crypto Treasury Arms Race


The race to build crypto treasuries is accelerating. Alongside high-profile ventures raising billions, blockchain native protocols themselves are exploring new ways to lock value into their ecosystems, and in some cases, even reimagine what a treasury can do.

On Aug. 7, the Chainlink network announced its own reserve, designed to accumulate the protocol’s native token Chainlink (LINK) collected from both onchain service fees and offchain enterprise revenue, creating a direct link between Chainlink’s business activity and long-term token demand.

Since then, the protocol has made two deposits to its newly launched onchain treasury. Onchain data from Etherscan shows total holdings at 109,661.68 LINK at this writing, valued at about $2.6 million.

While Chainlink hasn’t disclosed how much or how often it will add to the reserve, the initiative is part of a broader shift in crypto toward using treasuries as active drivers of token demand rather than passive reserves.

Related: What is Chainlink, and how does it work?

Chainlink reserve. Source: Chainlink

Turning treasuries into perpetual demand engines

Chainlink’s reserve is funded with revenue from enterprise clients in banking and capital markets. Those payments — whether in stablecoins, gas tokens, or fiat — are collected and automatically converted into LINK through Chainlink’s Payment Abstraction system before being deposited into the reserve.

Chainlink Labs says the network has already generated hundreds of millions of dollars from these enterprise deals. It also noted that no withdrawals will be made from the reserve for several years.

Also exploring crypto treasury alternatives is Cardano. In a June 15 livestream, Cardano’s founder Charles Hoskinson suggested converting 5%–10% of Cardano’s $1.2 billion ADA (ADA) treasury into Bitcoin and stablecoins, then using the yield to buy back its native token from the open market. By his estimates, reallocating around $100 million of ADA could generate $5 million–$10 million in annual buybacks, creating a perpetual demand loop.

Unlike Chainlink, which channels external revenue into LINK without selling its reserves, Cardano’s plan would reallocate existing assets, creating short-term sell pressure but offering the potential for larger long-term gains if the strategy works.

Danny Ryan, a research analyst at Bitwise, told Cointelegraph that sustained purchases in the tens of millions would “almost certainly pay long-term dividends for holders” if executed at scale. 

“These buyback programs should be seen by the market as a decidedly bullish development…Projects that believe in their own value should be willing to protect and grow their earned capital by investing back in the token. Investors will take note.”

Related: Sergey Nazarov compares Chainlink’s CRE to Ethereum’s early breakthrough

While the move could boost certain token values and add an extra layer of collateral, Ryan argues that it’s too early to gauge the market impact.

The analyst noted that it’s unclear how crypto native treasuries could impact its token prices, raising doubts over whether these efforts could meaningfully influence large tokens by trading volume, such as LINK.

“How much revenue Chainlink will spend on the reserve, how often they will buy, and exactly how much,” said the analyst, adding that it’s unclear whether such purchases could “move a market that sees over $1 billion in daily trading volumes.”

Ryan dismissed concerns that pooling LINK into a single treasury contract could centralize risk, saying the reserve is too small to affect a multibillion-dollar token. “[It is] a comparatively minuscule million-dollar holder of a token worth many billions by market cap.”