Understanding the new payment public chain Keeta?
Author: Nianqing, ChainCatcher
Editor: TB, ChainCatcher
Recently, significant progress has been made in the regulation of stablecoins in the United States. The Senate Banking Committee passed the "Guidance and Establishment of the United States Stablecoin National Innovation Act" (referred to as the "GENIUS Act") with a vote of 18 to 6. Embracing compliance has become the trend for the widespread adoption of stablecoins.
Although most stablecoins are issued on Layer 1 blockchains such as Ethereum, Tron, and BSC, these public chains themselves do not have compliance mechanisms, which may deter some traditional financial institutions. Currently, some payment-focused public chains like Stellar have built-in account control and anchoring mechanisms to support KYC. As regulations tighten, more public chains with built-in KYC/AML mechanisms may emerge to meet global compliance needs.
Recently, the public chain Keeta, focused on RWA and stablecoin payments, conducted its TGE on the Base network. Currently, the project has garnered relatively little attention domestically, but it is quite popular overseas. In early March, due to the project's decision to launch tokens without prior marketing groundwork, many people FUDed it as a scam project with a hacked Twitter account. Subsequently, the project team began releasing a white paper and marketing, with the team and founder Ty Schenk diligently hosting Spaces and answering questions on Twitter. The FUD noise has since quieted down a bit.
On March 17, Keeta's token KTA surged significantly, with a daily increase of over 50%. Since its launch on March 6, KTA has risen over 2500%. Currently, its TVL exceeds $70 million, with approximately 6,500 holding addresses. Keeta's operation can be described as "a quiet TGE that astonished everyone."
First, what is Keeta?
Keeta is the next-generation DAG (Directed Acyclic Graph) delegated proof-of-stake (dPoS) blockchain system that enables instant, compliant, and low-cost cross-border payments to eliminate TradFi bottlenecks. According to its white paper, Keeta aims to achieve two core competitive advantages: "extremely fast speed" and "regulatory compliance."
How fast is "extremely fast"?
Keeta promises to support up to 10 million transactions per second (TPS) and achieve a transaction settlement speed of 400 milliseconds. This high throughput and low-latency design make it suitable for large-scale payment and asset trading scenarios.
10 million TPS is indeed an exaggerated figure; generally, high-performance new chains only dare to promise up to 100,000 (the community has commented that this figure is akin to reading a science fiction novel).
According to the Keeta white paper, the assurance of Keeta's high performance is mainly due to: (1) no memory pool; (2) client-guided validation skipping the queue; (3) two-phase voting to ensure speed/security; (4) cloud servers (such as Google Cloud or AWS).
A clear disadvantage of this underlying technology is its heavy reliance on centralized cloud service providers. Additionally, 10 million TPS may not be testable in real application environments (even if it's boasting, you can't verify it).
Built-in compliance mechanisms
Keeta officially claims to be "the first blockchain network fully compliant with traditional financial regulations," improving efficiency through automated compliance screening and ensuring that all transactions comply with local laws through built-in anti-money laundering (AML), Bank Secrecy Act (BSA), and Know Your Customer (KYC) protocols.
Token issuers can set any rules, such as whitelisting individuals, enforcing transaction limits, or requiring specific certifications, which will be supported by the network. Moreover, token issuers have complete control over the governance of their stablecoins, such as adjusting token policies, implementing new rules, and even modifying identity requirements, ensuring ample flexibility.
To support requirements like identity verification, Keeta's on-chain certificates allow for instant verification without third parties. Trusted KYC providers on the network can provide certificates to verify specific attributes of individuals, such as age or location. A single certificate can be used for instant identity verification among multiple parties.
Additionally, to support the cross-network flow of fiat-backed stablecoins, Keeta's anchoring system can connect to traditional payment channels (such as ACH, SEPA, and SWIFT) without sacrificing security or compliance. Other blockchain networks can also connect as anchoring systems, enabling atomic swaps between stablecoins and native assets of the anchoring network.
Team and Funding Situation
In 2023, Keeta raised $17 million in seed funding with a FDV of $75 million, with former Google CEO Eric Schmidt also participating in this round of financing. According to some early reports, Keeta initially served enterprises directly, i.e., B2B business, and was invited to provide services in the United States, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, the UK, and the EU. However, unlike SWIFT, Keeta aims to serve a broader user base for payments below $1 million.
Keeta's co-founder and CEO Ty Schenk has been a software engineer since his teens, and before founding Keeta, his main work was related to crypto payments.
Keeta's CTO Roy Keene was the former chief developer of Nano, who chose to leave to change Nano's incentive mechanisms and institutional adoption and create a new project.
Keeta Token Economics
The image shows that Keeta's total token supply is 1 billion, with token distribution divided into four main parts:
- Community/Ecosystem Reserve: 50%
- Team: 20%
- Early Investors: 20%
- Foundation Reserve: 10%
Each part of the tokens has specific lock-up (Lock) and vesting plans, as follows:
- Community/Ecosystem Reserve: 75% unlocked at TGE (Token Generation Event), 6 months lock-up, 48 months vesting, unlocked monthly.
- Team: 9 months lock-up, 36 months vesting, unlocked monthly.
- Early Investors: 6 months lock-up, 24 months vesting, unlocked monthly.
- Foundation Reserve: 3 months lock-up, 48 months vesting, unlocked monthly.
Additionally, the uses of the Community/Ecosystem Reserve include: staking rewards, community growth programs, liquidity provision.
Keeta's KTA was initially priced at about $0.0076 on Base's DEX Aerodrome, likely calculated based on the previous valuation of $75 million. Currently, 400 million tokens are in circulation, with a fully diluted valuation of $168 million.
Project Planning and Roadmap
According to the roadmap, the Keeta Network testnet will be launched at the end of this month, accompanied by a web wallet and block explorer. The mainnet will launch in June, with more testnet features being rolled out in the months leading up to the mainnet launch. For example, digital identity anchoring, web wallet certificate support, block explorer certificate support, native mobile wallet, etc.
Why does an L1 choose to TGE on L2 Base?
This is currently the biggest controversy facing Keeta. Some in the community question why the Keeta team, which has its own Layer 1, chose to TGE on Base, seeing it as unnecessary, especially since assets will need to be anchored back to their own chain after the mainnet goes live.
The team has responded to related concerns on multiple occasions, stating that the fair launch is due to their emphasis on community building, hoping the community can participate in the project's construction and growth early on. Additionally, compared to Keeta, which has no user base yet, Base has a larger dissemination foundation and traffic, and the gas fees are cheaper than those on the Ethereum mainnet. The KTA token will remain on Base until the mainnet launches, at which point the team will utilize the new anchoring features, and it will become the native token on Keeta L1.
(This article only introduces early projects and does not constitute investment advice.)