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I just watched Lily Liu's intervention at Consensus Hong Kong 2026, and there’s something that can’t be ignored: the president of Solana Foundation is talking about something much more specific than the typical crypto hype.
Instead of selling the utopian vision of web3, Liu focuses on what really works: finance and capital markets. Her argument is quite clear - blockchains don’t need to be general-purpose technology to revolutionize everything. They just need to be excellent at what they do: opening up capital markets and tokenizing assets.
What grabbed my attention the most was her emphasis on scale. According to Liu, the real epicenter of crypto isn’t in the West - it’s in Asia. The region has the track record with Bitcoin, it has a massive user base, and it has the talent. Solana positions itself as the neutral infrastructure to serve billions of internet users at that scale.
The vision is pretty ambitious: tokenizing practically all global assets on-chain. From everyday payments to high-frequency operations, all in a unified market. The primitives that began with ICOs should now empower companies outside of crypto as well.
What Liu constantly underlines is democratization. Not only of access to capital, but also of talent and asset formation. That’s something rare in traditional markets, and that’s where crypto can truly make a difference.
Another interesting detail: Liu defends metrics based on real network revenue, not on pretty governance tokens. Value must come from real usage, not speculative promises. This suggests a maturation in how sustainability is thought about in these projects.
Meanwhile, stories like Bitmine (which went from mining to accumulating nearly 5% of all ether in six months) show that there are serious players moving real capital in this direction. It’s not just conference talk.