$300 Million Lockup: Storj Clarifies Token Economics in Surprise Reveal
Not many tokens are taking steps to clarify how they're handling their own funds. Storj, however, did just that with a surprise announcement Tuesday. · CoinDesk

One of the oldest and most notable token projects is taking steps to offer its community clarity on how it manages the funds it holds in its own network.

Revealed exclusively to CoinDesk, the blockchain-based file storage network Storj is announcing it will lock-up of 245 million tokens it has in reserve (valued at more than $300 million at press time) for another six months. Yet apart from offering clarity to investors, the move effectively makes Storj, which announced in May it would be creating 500 million tokens on ethereum – 70 million which it sold in a public, an outlier in the unwieldy and opaque world of crypto-economics.

The announcement highlights what's a less commonly acknowledged issue – that many investors simply don't have clarity on the dates when the firms associated with a token's development may be able to access their liquidity.

For example, onstage at Token Summit II in December, Ryan Selkis, entrepreneur-in-residence at ConsenSys, detailed several unclear token distribution schedules from well-known blockchain projects. In his mind, token issuers need to be far more open with those schedules, since the rate at which tokens are launched could have significant impacts on other buyers.

Storj's reserve tokens were scheduled to be released on Dec. 20, but according to executives at the company, holding those reserves until a clearer picture of the project's timeline can be formulated will lead to increased stability.

While clarity is hard to come by, market participants understand what a problem this secrecy in distribution could be.

"You've got these quasi-fiduciaries selling quasi-securities over a quasi-vesting period," Selkis said.

Storj chief financial officer, Matthew May, echoed that sentiment, telling CoinDesk:

"Since these coin offerings are so new, there's a real need to be transparent. There's some market makers out there trying to manipulate these coins."

Why delay?

For some, this move could seem strange, since releasing the tokens would give Storj access to a significant sum of money that it could use to hire more employees and pursue more partnerships.

But according to Philip Hutchins, chief technology officer at Storj, the company has all the funds it will need for the next six months. And that will signal to its community that the company is stable and here for the long term, he said.

"Software changes, right? Over time we are learning how the cadence of the token changes," Hutchins said. "We're taking a little bit longer to get a better idea of what that flow looks like."