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Today’s episode is with Thamilla Talarico, head of on-chain finance growth for Brazil at Polygon Labs. You may recall that she previously represented Ernst & Young in the Central Bank’s Drex pilot.
We talk about Polygon’s deliberate investment in Brazilian market expansion, recognizing the country's unique position in the Latin American digital asset ecosystem.
We also dive into several important changes to Polygon’s growth strategy. Gone are the days when Starbucks and Nike were issuing NFTs on the platform. Nowadays, they are laser focused on payments and on-chain finance (RWAs).
Thamilla also reflects at length about her experience working on the Drex pilot with EY. We explore about the good, bad and ugly aspects of the project, and how, ultimately blockchain privacy technology is just not ready to be deployed at the scale required by the Central Bank.
Key Takeaways Regarding Polygon’s Pivot
* Laser-focused vision: Polygon has shifted from being a general-purpose blockchain to specifically targeting real-world assets and payments, moving away from the scattered approach that previously included NFT partnerships and various enterprise initiatives
* Market dominance in BRL stablecoins: Brazilian Real stablecoins represent the second-largest non-USD stablecoin volume on Polygon, with major issuers including BRL1 (Bitso, Mercado Bitcoin, Foxbit consortium), BRLA (Avenia), and BRZ (Transfero)
* Technical infrastructure improvements: The Giga gas roadmap promises significant performance enhancements, scaling from 1,000 TPS currently to 5,000 TPS by October 2024, with eventual targets of 100,000 TPS
* Geographic expansion strategy: Brazil represents one of four key markets receiving dedicated business development resources, alongside Hong Kong, India, and the UK
Drex Project Reflections and Market Implications
* Privacy vs. composability trade-offs: The fundamental challenge wasn't scalability, but rather balancing blockchain's inherent transparency with privacy requirements and regulatory compliance under Brazilian data protection laws
* Technical maturity gaps: None of the three privacy solutions tested in Phase One met the Central Bank's production-ready standards, highlighting the nascent state of enterprise-grade privacy technologies
* Regulatory complexity: The Central Bank struggled to reconcile blockchain's transparency with compliance requirements, particularly around data protection and the balance between audit capabilities and broad surveillance powers
* Positive externalities: Despite the pivot, the project successfully matured Brazil's digital assets ecosystem, creating technical expertise, fostering collaboration between competitors, and establishing business relationships that will continue beyond Drex
Moving forward, Thamilla emphasizes that the infrastructure, knowledge, and business cases developed during the Drex pilot remain valuable.
The focus should shift toward private sector initiatives using stablecoins as settlement instruments for tokenized assets, leveraging the colla
Published on 3Â months, 2Â weeks ago
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