4.2 KiB
| type | domain | description | confidence | source | created |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| claim | internet-finance | Market rejection of liquidity solution despite stated liquidity crisis demonstrates futarchy's ability to price trade-offs | experimental | MetaDAO Proposal 8 failure, 2024-02-18 to 2024-02-24 | 2026-03-11 |
Futarchy markets can reject solutions to acknowledged problems when the proposed solution creates worse second-order effects than the problem it solves
MetaDAO Proposal 8 explicitly stated "The current liquidity within the META markets is proving insufficient to support the demand" and proposed a $100,000 OTC trade to address this. The proposal failed. This is evidence that futarchy markets can distinguish between "we have a problem" and "this solution is net positive."
The proposal acknowledged the liquidity crisis and offered a concrete solution: Ben Hawkins would commit $100k USDC to acquire up to 500 META tokens, with half the USDC used to create a 50/50 AMM pool. The proposal projected ~15% increase in META value and 2-7% increase in circulating supply. Despite these stated benefits and the acknowledged need, the market rejected it.
This suggests the conditional markets priced second-order effects that outweighed the first-order liquidity benefit:
- Dilution risk: Adding 284-1000 META to 14,530 circulating supply (2-7% dilution) might depress price more than liquidity helps
- Price uncertainty: The max(TWAP, $200) formula with spot at $695 created massive uncertainty about actual dilution
- Counterparty risk: Doubt about whether Ben Hawkins would actually provide sustained liquidity vs. extracting value
- Precedent risk: Approving discounted OTC sales might trigger more dilutive proposals
The proposal's own risk section noted "extreme risk" and "unknown unknowns," suggesting even the proposers recognized the trade-offs. The market's rejection indicates it weighted these risks higher than the liquidity benefit.
This is significant for futarchy theory. Critics argue prediction markets can't handle complex trade-offs or will rubber-stamp solutions to stated problems. This case shows the opposite: the market rejected a solution to an acknowledged crisis, implying it priced the cure as worse than the disease.
However, this is a single case. Alternative explanations:
- The market simply didn't believe the liquidity crisis was severe
- The specific price terms were unacceptable, not the concept
- Low trading volume meant the decision was noise, not signal
- The proposal's complexity deterred participation (as noted in futarchy adoption faces friction from token price psychology proposal complexity and liquidity requirements)
The proposal's failure is consistent with futarchy-excels-at-relative-selection-but-fails-at-absolute-prediction-because-ordinal-ranking-works-while-cardinal-estimation-requires-calibration — the market could rank "this proposal" below "status quo" but couldn't necessarily estimate the optimal liquidity solution.
Evidence
- Proposal explicitly stated: "The current liquidity within the META markets is proving insufficient to support the demand"
- Proposal offered $100k USDC for liquidity, projected 15% value increase
- Proposal failed 2024-02-24 after 6-day market period
- MetaDAO had 14,530 META circulating, proposal would add 284-1000 META (2-7%)
- Price formula max(TWAP, $200) with spot at $695.92 created 65-71% discount
Challenges
- Single case, not a pattern
- Low trading volume in MetaDAO markets may mean decision was noise
- Market may have rejected specific terms (price, counterparty) not the concept
- No data on what alternative liquidity solution would have passed
Relevant Notes:
- futarchy adoption faces friction from token price psychology proposal complexity and liquidity requirements
- futarchy-excels-at-relative-selection-but-fails-at-absolute-prediction-because-ordinal-ranking-works-while-cardinal-estimation-requires-calibration
- MetaDAOs Autocrat program implements futarchy through conditional token markets where proposals create parallel pass and fail universes settled by time-weighted average price over a three-day window
- MetaDAOs futarchy implementation shows limited trading volume in uncontested decisions
Topics:
- domains/internet-finance/_map
- core/mechanisms/_map