a blockchain that my company manages
Does this imply a central authority, or you plan to decentralize, e.g. with PoS for consensus and DAO for decisions?
Is it a general-purpose blockchain, which welcomes ordinary payments and custom smart contracts, or highly specialized in said pools?
yes. a central authority, that is governed by a company that I run. Decentralization isn't without it's security flaws. Blockchains must maintain the elements of decentralization, security, and scalability. Improving one of these areas often results in sacrificing another. Creating this balance has been a challenge for developers for as long as blockchain technology has existed, and is often referred to as the blockchain trilemma. I believe there must be some form of human oversight, focused in the form of a savy to the market, forward facing CEO (i.e ya boy
) , who understands how quickly the Web3 space can change, is trying to innovate and stabilize THE markets, and find WIN-WIN solutions for end users and institutional investors in this space alike, because I see the problems and solutions clearly. But I understand that any idea and creator can have blindspots. Hence why I think whatever this new blockchain is will more than likely be open source developed, and will use smart contracts that are maintained and monitored by A.I. and humans. It should serve both as a general purpose blockchain that offers all the customary integrations. The liquidity pools will be under management by my company and the maintenance and exchanges required to enter them, add liquidity, payment of funds. etc. will all be monitored and supervised by my company. This blockchain would integrate will all new and existing protocols across networks and all new ones and their main developer community/ CEO, whatever, etc, and handle the interfacing with institutional investors with those currencies in those pools. Those pools are a form of added liquidity that is housed off chain and is an exclusive crypto bond that is offered to institutional investors only to grow the liquidity of the assest and stabilize the market as a whole and provide users who are not a part of the development of said token/coin but who participate in the buying,selling,trade, or use of utility for that asset on common exchanges (coinbase, metamask, pancakeswap, etc.) an insurance for any fraud perpetrated by the developers of the token or bad actors in the web3 space. If the project goes under due to fraudulent activities/actors, end user investors are guaranteed to be backed by the bond that institutional investors liquidity has maintained by being paired with the projects burn in the banking pool. The institutional investors will be rewarded both for holding the bond of a project that never goes under for however long a period they have maintained the asset (10 year bond, 15 year bond, 20 year bond at a 30% return rate or whatever rate is achieved by the liquidity they provide to said pools, whatever the case may be per individual institutional investor) and rewarded by my company for backing investors losses by achieving a higher return rate in the liquidity pool of the project that is held off chain and then subsequently governed post rug pull, flash loan manipulation, etc, then by my company, the initial investors, and institutional investors. they will then have access to and potential rewards in the future i.e. having a lowered minimum liquidity required amount to enter other banking pools, increased responsibility of the security of the token and projects they hold, etc. there are many ways i see to make this a profitable proposition for institutional investors. I can go into them ad nauseum but part of that is finding out what exactly is the most enticing thing to institutional investors about essentially carrying the risk of the crypto market in the form of a bond, I imagine it would be getting that bond backed by the US government or some stable coin as a form of assurity to that investor but I imagine that won't necessarily be hard to do.
hold all current and future crypto project's assets (minus those that are DAOs, Bitcoin, etc)
Have you formulated some criteria? Do you see a room for NFTs? What about crypto with privacy features?
yes. the criteria would be the projects willingness to participate in the security/stabilization/banking pools by dedicating their burn. once they have granted that access, they have assured the space of their intention to be a good actor and provided insurance for instance that they are not. Yes NFTs have room, creators or my company could even make ghost variants that are held in reserve by my company and awarded to investors upon the projects failure. That might create it's own market or asset class based purely off their rarity. That idea needs more exploration but the basis is the same. Any crypto can create a burn, dedicate that burn to this banking pool (Bank Coin is what I think I will call it) and thus paired with institutional investment creat this bond that with oversight be used to correct losses and fraudulent activities while also creating stabilization in the market as a whole while also being it's own lucrative non competitive asset class that is a sister to all existing projects.
pair it in a liquidity pool with fiat currency supplied by large institutional investors
Why not let retail investors add fiat liquidity, maybe even with existing stablecoins?
that could be explored and seems like a good idea, their rewards for doing so would have to be tailored to be suitable to make it worth their time and investment to pair in a banking pool. actually I don't believe that on 2nd thought that would be a viable option because those pools would still need to be paired with institutional money and thus locked for a lengthy period of time in order to create stabilization, therefore most users would probably want to operate in normal channels since they want to enter and exist the market at the speed of thought. Yet I don't see how offering retail investors the same opportunity if they are willing to abide by the same time limits as institutions would be a bad idea. The pool would just have to be specialized and disclosed to all participating who exactly is participating weather institutional, retail, or all the above.