Shared security is a subsidy. Rollups like Arbitrum and Optimism pay L1s for data and proofs, but their native tokens capture zero value from this transaction fee flow.
Why Shared Security Models Dilute Rollup Token Value
An analysis of how outsourcing security to Ethereum or EigenLayer transforms a rollup's native token into a purely inflationary fee token, eroding its fundamental value proposition for investors and builders.
Introduction: The Security Subsidy Trap
Shared security models create a fundamental misalignment where rollup token value is extracted to subsidize the underlying chain.
The tokenomics are broken. A rollup's sequencer revenue is paid in ETH to Ethereum, while its own token is relegated to governance, creating a value sink for holders.
This misalignment is structural. Unlike app-chains in Cosmos or Avalanche, where the native token secures the chain, rollup tokens are financial derivatives of the L1's security.
Evidence: Over 90% of Arbitrum's transaction fees are paid to Ethereum for calldata, a direct wealth transfer that its ARB token cannot monetize.
The Three Pillars of Rollup Token Value (And Which One Dies)
Rollup tokens derive value from three core functions; shared security models fatally undermine one.
The Sovereignty Pillar: Native Sequencing
The right to order transactions and capture MEV is the primary value accrual mechanism. This is the fee revenue engine for the token.
- Captures 100% of sequencer profits and MEV from the chain.
- Enables protocol-owned liquidity and direct treasury funding.
- Dies under shared sequencing (e.g., Espresso, Astria), which socializes this premium.
The Utility Pillar: Gas Token & Governance
The token as the mandatory fuel for execution and the governance key for upgrades. This is the utility and control layer.
- Gas fees create constant, inelastic demand for the token.
- Governance controls critical parameters (e.g., fee markets, upgrades).
- Survives shared security, as the rollup's virtual machine and DAO remain distinct.
The Security Pillar: Proof-of-Stake Bonding
The token staked to slashably secure the chain's bridge or validation mechanism. This is the trust minimization layer.
- Stakers act as the final backstop against invalid state transitions.
- Creates a credibly neutral economic barrier for attackers.
- Dies under shared security (e.g., EigenLayer, Babylon), which replaces it with re-staked ETH or BTC, dissolving the rollup's sovereign security budget.
The Mechanics of Value Leakage
Shared security models systematically divert economic value away from the native token of the rollup.
Security is a commodity. Rollups that outsource consensus to Ethereum L1 or a third-party Data Availability (DA) layer purchase a standardized service. This turns their token's primary utility into a payment mechanism, not a value-accruing asset.
Value accrual is externalized. The sequencer fee market and MEV revenue are the primary profit centers. In shared models like Optimism's Superchain, this value flows to the shared sequencer's token (OP) or the base layer (ETH), not the individual chain's token.
The token becomes a governance wrapper. Without a direct claim on core protocol revenue, the token's utility is relegated to fee discounts and voting power. This creates a weaker value proposition compared to monolithic chains like Solana.
Evidence: The market cap/TVL ratio for Arbitrum (ARB) and Optimism (OP) is structurally lower than for Solana (SOL). This discount reflects the market pricing in the value leakage to Ethereum's base layer.
Security Model Trade-Offs: Value vs. Convenience
How a rollup's choice of security provider impacts its native token's utility, value capture, and economic sustainability.
| Core Economic Feature | Sovereign Rollup (e.g., Arbitrum, Optimism) | Shared Sequencer (e.g., Espresso, Astria) | Validium / Alt-DA (e.g., StarkEx, zkPorter) |
|---|---|---|---|
Native Token Utility | Sequencing rights, Governance, Gas | Governance only | Data Availability payment, Proof submission |
Sequencer Revenue Capture | 100% of priority fees & MEV | ~20-40% revenue share (est.) | Not applicable (off-chain sequencer) |
Security Provider Fee | Zero (self-operated) | 2-5% of sequencer revenue | $0.01-$0.10 per tx (DA cost) |
Capital Efficiency for Stakers | High (staking secures own chain) | Low (staking secures many chains) | None (no staking for security) |
Time-to-Finality (L1 inclusion) | ~1-20 minutes | < 1 minute (pre-confirmations) | ~1-20 minutes |
Censorship Resistance | High (decentralized sequencer set) | Medium (operator committee) | Low (single operator default) |
Economic Attack Cost | Full chain value (billions $) | Shared network value (millions $) | State root bond only (thousands $) |
Steelman: "But Launch Speed and Security Matter More"
Shared security models like EigenLayer and Babylon offer a compelling trade-off: accelerated launch velocity and inherited security at the cost of diluted token value.
Shared security is a launchpad. Protocols like EigenLayer AVS and Babylon enable new rollups to inherit Ethereum's security without a multi-year bootstrapping period. This bypasses the need for a native token to secure the chain initially.
Token value accrual is delayed. The native token's security premium is outsourced to the shared security provider. This creates a fundamental misalignment; the token's primary utility becomes governance, which historically captures less value than security.
Compare to sovereign chains. A rollup like Arbitrum bootstrapped its own validator set, creating direct demand for its ARB token for staking and slashing. A shared-secured rollup's token lacks this foundational economic hook.
Evidence: The Celestia modular thesis demonstrates this. By separating data availability from execution, it enables cheap chains but forces them to find value elsewhere, often leading to hyperinflationary token models to attract validators.
Case Studies in Value Accrual & Leakage
Outsourcing security to a third-party chain or marketplace fragments the economic moat of a rollup, turning its native token into a governance-only asset.
The Problem: The Alt-L1 Liquidity Siphon
Rollups using Ethereum for DA but Celestia for cheaper data availability create a value leak. The rollup token captures only transaction fees, while the underlying data value accrues to $TIA stakers. This bifurcates the security budget and commoditizes the rollup's core service.
- Value Leak: Data availability fees flow to an external chain.
- Weakened Moats: Competing rollups using the same DA layer become near-identical commodities.
The Problem: The Bridge-as-a-Service Trap
Relying on canonical bridges from LayerZero or Axelar cedes control of the primary liquidity gateway. The rollup's token cannot capture fees from the critical bridging activity, which instead accrues to the bridge protocol's token ($ZRO, $AXL). This externalizes network effects.
- Value Leak: Bridging fees and message fees are extracted externally.
- Vendor Lock-in: The rollup's security depends on a third-party's validator set.
The Solution: The Integrated Stack Model
Arbitrum and zkSync demonstrate that controlling the full stack—sequencer, prover, bridge, and DA—creates a unified fee sink. All economic activity (gas, proving, bridging) is payable in and benefits the native token, creating a strong fee capture flywheel and sustainable security budget.
- Value Accrual: All L2 fees (gas, sequencing) are burned or go to the DAO treasury.
- Strong Moats: Full-stack control enables unique feature development and sticky liquidity.
The Problem: The Shared Sequencer Commoditization
Using a shared sequencer network like Astria or Espresso outsources the most profitable and strategically critical component. The rollup surrenders MEV capture and transaction ordering to a third party, whose token ($ASTRIA) captures the economic rent. This reduces the rollup to a mere execution environment.
- Value Leak: MEV and sequencing revenue is extracted.
- Strategic Risk: Cedes control over user experience and censorship resistance.
The Solution: The Sovereign Rollup Gambit
Celestia-based rollups and EigenLayer AVSs embrace shared security for bootstrapping but plan a pivot. The model uses cheap, external security to launch, then uses accrued fees to bootstrap an independent validator set (e.g., via restaking or a dedicated token). This is a time-bound subsidy, not a permanent leak.
- Strategy: Use shared security as a subsidy, not a dependency.
- Endgame: Transition to a captured fee model after achieving scale.
The Verdict: Governance Tokens vs. Product Tokens
A rollup token that does not capture fees is a governance token with weak fundamentals, akin to Uniswap's $UNI. A token that captures fees is a product token with intrinsic cash flows, akin to Ethereum's $ETH. Shared security models overwhelmingly produce the former, diluting long-term value.
- Weak Model: Token votes on treasury funds only.
- Strong Model: Token is the required payment for core network services.
The Sovereign Rollup Endgame
Shared security models commoditize execution and erode the economic foundation of a rollup's native token.
Shared security commoditizes execution. Relying on a base layer like Ethereum or Celestia for consensus and data availability transforms the rollup into a pure execution client. This strips the protocol of its most defensible moat, forcing competition on thin margins akin to AWS regions.
The token becomes a governance coupon. Without a staked token securing the chain, its utility collapses to fee payment and protocol voting. This mirrors the fee market trap where tokens like Arbitrum's ARB and Optimism's OP derive minimal value from their core function.
Sovereign rollups recapture the security premium. A rollup with its own validator set, like a Bitcoin sidechain or dYmension RollApp, embeds value accrual directly into its staking asset. Security is the foundational product, not a rented commodity from Ethereum.
Evidence: The total value secured (TVS) metric for EigenLayer restaking pools demonstrates the market's willingness to pay for security-as-a-service, highlighting the value that shared security rollups outsource and forfeit.
TL;DR for Time-Poor Builders
Shared security models like restaking and L2-as-a-service commoditize the rollup, shifting value away from its native token.
The Problem: The Validator Commodity Trap
Using EigenLayer or AltLayer for security outsources your most critical function. Your token's utility is reduced to governance and fee payment, competing with hundreds of other rollups for the same pooled security.\n- Value Capture: Security spend flows to restakers (e.g., EigenLayer operators), not your token holders.\n- Differentiation: Your chain is just another config file on a shared sequencer set.
The Solution: Own Your Data & Sequencing
Maximize token utility by vertically integrating the stack. Force users and builders to bond your token for core services like data availability and transaction ordering.\n- Celestia/EigenDA Alternative: Use your token to pay for a dedicated, token-validated data availability committee.\n- Shared Sequencer Alternative: Run your own sequencer set with native token staking for liveness guarantees and MEV redistribution.
The Reality: Shared Security is for Bootstrapping
Treat services like EigenLayer, AltLayer, and Caldera as launchpads, not permanent infrastructure. The endgame is a sovereign chain where your token is the required collateral for the state machine.\n- Phase 1: Use shared security to reach $100M+ TVL and prove product-market fit.\n- Phase 2: Decouple. Fork the OP Stack or Arbitrum Nitro codebase and embed your token into the core protocol mechanics.
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