Loopring is a layer 2 scaling protocol designed to optimize and facilitate the building of non-custodial, orderbook-based decentralized exchanges (DEX) and payment protocols on Ethereum. The project looks to eliminate the bottlenecks associated with cost and scalability often experienced by Ethereum users.
Loopring achieves this by building a secondary layer powered by ZK-rollups where transactions can be processed at a fraction of a cent and finalized faster than it would typically take to execute transactions on the Ethereum blockchain. By adopting the ZK-rollup technology, Loopring processes transactions in batches rather than entering each individually into the blockchain. This system not only enhances speed but also reduces transaction fees considerably.
Notably, Loopring's solution still relies on the security infrastructure of Ethereum. In other words, even though transactions are processed on a secondary layer, finality is achieved when such transactions are eventually recorded on Ethereum's blockchain. Another core feature is Loopring's decentralized nature. The protocol does not rely on centralized processes or infrastructures to function. As such, Loopring ensures that users are in control of their funds at all times.
LRC is the native ERC-20 token of the Loopring protocol. It is primarily used to anchor the incentive-based economy that rewards users for contributing positively to the sustainability of the protocol and its in-house decentralized exchange.
Like most layer-2 solutions, Loopring allows users to pay fees with its native coin. When a user completes a trade on Loopring, 20% of the associated transaction fee is set aside as the protocol fee. The accrued protocol fees are shared among liquidity providers and insurers of Loopring DEX. Liquidity providers are the users that deposit their holdings on the decentralized exchange to make liquidity available for other users to trade against. On the other hand, insurers deposit their LRC tokens into Loopring's insurance fund as a safety net against unforeseen security incidents.
Apart from the yield-generating system designed around LRC, holders can also use their tokens for governance purposes. Since Loopring is governed by a DAO, users can join the decision-making process by holding LRC.
LRC price and tokenomics
At the time of writing, there are around $1.33 billion LRC tokens in circulation. This makes up around 97% of the maximum supply of LRC capped at 1.37 billion tokens. In other words, no new LRC tokens are being supplied via mining or staking-based emission systems.
Around 600,000 LRC tokens have been burned or removed permanently from circulation. The remaining 43 million LRC tokens yet to be released into circulation are either held by the DAO or staked by exchange operators to enable a sustainable trading platform on Loopring.
In 2021, Loopring launched a revised LRC tokenomics that reshuffled how tokens were distributed to different sets of network contributors. The previous tokenomics had a 70-20-10 sharing formula. 70% of the protocol fees went to stakers, 20% to the DAO, and the remaining 10% was burned. However, with the new tokenomics that launched in 2021, the LRC tokenomics now utilizes an 80-10-10 sharing formula. 80% of the protocol fees are shared among liquidity providers, 10% is awarded to the DAO, and the remaining 10% funds the yield-earning initiative designed for insurers.
While the original tokenomics ensures that 10% of the earnings generated from protocol fees is burned, the new system leaves it to the DAO to determine the burning rate of LRC. The community members collectively decide how to spend the 10% allocated to the DAO. As such, they can choose to burn part or all of the funds available for spending.
Loopring adopts a deflationary model, which means the supply of LRC shrinks over time. Like all other cryptocurrency protocols running a deflationary token model, Loopring hopes that the continuous burning or reduction of the token supply will positively impact the value of LRC.
About the founders
Loopring was founded in 2017 by David Wang, a former Google and Boston Scientific lead software engineer, and Jay Zhou, a former Paypal employee.
After the introduction of Loopring in 2017, the development team opted to conduct an ICO in August of the same year. At the end of the crowd sale, Loopring had raised $45 million. However, the team had to return 80% of the fund to investors due to the ICO crackdown imposed by China. The Loopring Foundation, the non-profit organization tasked with building and managing Loopring, used the remaining 20% to fund the development of the protocol.
Remarkably, Loopring has sealed several key partnerships with crypto and traditional organizations. For instance, the protocol collaborated with Chainlink in 2019 to implement Oracle integrations on Loopring V3.
The first integration between Loopring and Chainlink enabled the LRC/ETH price feed for DEX users. Another key integration was announced in March 2022 when Loopring became the layer 2 scaling platform powering GameStop's NFT marketplace. The platform officially went live in July 2022.
Some of the prominent investors of Loopring include Consensus FinTech Group, Cosmos Capital, ChainFunder, Hash Capital, and Matrix CIB.
Loopring highlights
Loopring launched a VIP reward system aimed at market makers and high-volume traders late in 2021. This is similar to the reward model used by centralized exchanges to determine which users are eligible for discounts and rebates.
The partnership with Gamestop is Loopring's biggest highlight in 2022, and arguably the most significant since the company's inception. The announcement of this partnership alone resulted in a 32% increase in the price of LRC.
The cost-effective minting feature launched in February 2022 is another example of Loopring's growing presence in the NFT market. Users can use this service to mint NFTs for less than $1.
Loopring also entered the Metaverse in 2022, when it launched the beta version of Loopring HQ on Decentraland and held a virtual meetup to commemorate the occasion.