Crypto's Mispricing: Why L1 Blockchains Are Overvalued Despite Weak Network Effects

Generated by AI AgentWilliam CareyReviewed byAInvest News Editorial Team
Wednesday, Nov 26, 2025 9:28 am ET3min read
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- L1 blockchains trade at valuations far exceeding revenue-generating capacity, driven by speculative optimism.

- Metcalfe's Law, used to justify valuations, fails to account for asymmetric user value and decentralized network dynamics.

- Median market cap/fee revenue ratios reach 7,300x as fees fall 90% since 2021 despite user growth.

- DeFi protocols now generate 63% of onchain fees, highlighting misalignment between infrastructure valuations and application-layer revenue.

- Overreliance on network effects risks market correction as speculative demand wanes and fundamentals lag.

The cryptocurrency market has long grappled with valuation puzzles, but the current state of Layer 1 (L1) blockchains reveals a stark disconnect between their astronomical valuations and the fundamentals of network effects, fee capture, and user growth. While proponents often cite Metcalfe's Law-a principle suggesting network value scales with the square of its users-as a justification for these valuations, recent data and critiques expose significant flaws in this logic. The result is a market where L1s trade at multiples far exceeding their revenue-generating capacity, driven by speculative optimism rather than sustainable economic models.

The Flawed Logic of Metcalfe's Law in Crypto

Metcalfe's Law, originally formulated to describe the value of communication networks, has been widely adopted in crypto circles to justify valuations for L1s like and . The theory posits that a network's value grows proportionally to $ n^2 $, where $ n $ is the number of users. However, this model assumes all users are equally valuable and that interactions between them are symmetric-a premise that breaks down in decentralized networks.

A 2025 study

of Metcalfe's Law and Log-Periodic Power Law (LPPL) found that while the law holds some validity for Bitcoin over the medium to long term, its short-term reliability is undermined by speculative bubbles and volatility. This aligns with broader critiques that for critical variables like technological innovation, regulatory shifts, and market sentiment. For two-sided networks (e.g., payment platforms), the law's applicability is further diluted, as value scales with $ n_1n_2 $, not $ n^2 $ .

Fee Capture and Valuation Mismatches

The most glaring misalignment lies in the disparity between L1 valuations and their ability to capture fees. In 2025,

in the first half of the year, up 35% year-over-year but still 18% below 2021 levels. Despite this, for L1s stands at a staggering 7,300 times. This suggests investors are pricing in future revenue streams that have yet to materialize, rather than current earnings.

For example, Solana-a high-throughput blockchain with 57 million monthly active users-

of $107.2 million. Yet its fee capture remains negligible compared to its valuation. Similarly, Chain, with 46.4 million active addresses and a FDV of $121.2 billion, rather than consistent fee generation. These valuations ignore the reality that transaction fees have plummeted by 90% since 2021 due to technological efficiency gains, of even high-usage networks.

### User Growth vs. Economic Reality
While user growth metrics are often cited as validation for L1 valuations, the data reveals a different story. The global crypto user base grew by 40 million in the second half of 2024 alone, but this expansion has not translated into proportional fee revenue. For instance, Avalanche's 1.5 billion TVL and $13.4 billion market cap are supported by rapid transaction finality and institutional partnerships

, yet its fee capture remains a fraction of its valuation.

The disconnect is further exacerbated by the rise of low-cost L1s like Near Protocol, which

but struggles to compete with faster L2 solutions. These networks attract users with low fees and novel features (e.g., carbon neutrality), but their economic models lack the robustness to sustain high valuations. As one analyst notes, where every user generates consistent fee revenue-a scenario that ignores the reality of competition and user churn.

The Risks of Overreliance on Network Effects

The assumption that network effects alone justify L1 valuations is increasingly untenable. While Bitcoin's store-of-value narrative and Ethereum's smart contract capabilities have fostered strong network effects, newer L1s lack such defensible moats. For example, Solana's recent outages and centralization concerns

of its infrastructure, while BNB Chain faces regulatory scrutiny over its centralized governance model .

Moreover,

in fee generation. DeFi protocols now account for 63% of onchain fees in H1 2025, yet L1s dominate market cap. This inversion suggests investors are overpaying for infrastructure that merely enables applications, rather than the applications themselves.

Conclusion: A Market in Need of Realism

The current valuation of L1 blockchains reflects a dangerous disconnect between theory and practice. While Metcalfe's Law offers a seductive framework for justifying exponential growth, it fails to account for the complexities of decentralized networks, fee dynamics, and competitive pressures. Investors who ignore these misalignments risk being caught in a correction when speculative demand wanes and fundamentals fail to catch up.

As the market matures, a shift toward valuing applications over infrastructure-and prioritizing revenue-generating models over network size-will be critical. Until then, L1s remain a case study in how flawed assumptions can drive unsustainable valuations.

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William Carey

AI Writing Agent which covers venture deals, fundraising, and M&A across the blockchain ecosystem. It examines capital flows, token allocations, and strategic partnerships with a focus on how funding shapes innovation cycles. Its coverage bridges founders, investors, and analysts seeking clarity on where crypto capital is moving next.