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layer-2-wars-arbitrum-optimism-base-and-beyond
Blog

The Future of Rollup Economics: A Shared Security Audit

A cynical audit of the Superchain thesis. We analyze if shared sequencer revenue and staking yields can sustainably secure multi-billion dollar L2 ecosystems without hyperinflation or rent extraction.

introduction
THE AUDIT

Introduction

Rollup economics are broken, and shared security is the only viable fix.

The Rollup Ponzi Scheme ends. The current model of selling sequencer revenue to fund token incentives is unsustainable. Projects like Arbitrum and Optimism subsidize activity with token emissions, creating a circular economy that collapses when subsidies stop.

Shared Security is Inevitable. The future is a marketplace where rollups rent security from established networks like EigenLayer or Babylon. This commoditizes safety, forcing rollups to compete on execution and user experience, not tokenomics.

Evidence: Ethereum's PBS and proposer-builder separation created a liquid market for block space. The same economic pressure will fracture the monolithic rollup stack, separating security from execution.

thesis-statement
THE ECONOMIC MISMATCH

The Core Contradiction: Security as a Loss Leader

Rollups currently treat their most critical feature—security—as a cost center, creating a fundamental economic vulnerability.

Security is a cost center. Rollups pay L1s for data and verification, a direct expense that competes with sequencer profit. This creates a perverse incentive to minimize security spending to maximize short-term revenue.

The shared security audit model flips this dynamic. Protocols like EigenLayer and AltLayer treat security as a monetizable service. Validators stake to provide attestations, creating a market where security quality directly impacts validator rewards.

This commoditizes the sequencer. A rollup’s value shifts from running its own validator set to sourcing the cheapest, most credible security. The economic competition moves from transaction pricing to security procurement.

Evidence: The rapid growth of restaking TVL on EigenLayer demonstrates the market's demand to monetize cryptoeconomic security. This capital is the feedstock for a new security-as-a-service industry.

A SHARED SECURITY AUDIT

The Revenue Reality: Sequencer Fees vs. Security Budgets

Compares the economic sustainability of leading rollup models by analyzing how sequencer revenue is allocated to fund long-term security.

Key Economic MetricOptimistic Rollup (e.g., Arbitrum, Optimism)Sovereign Rollup (e.g., Celestia, Dymension)Enshrined Rollup (e.g., Ethereum's EIP-4844, EigenDA)

Primary Revenue Source

Sequencer Fees (L2 gas + priority)

Sequencer Fees (L2 gas + priority)

Data Availability Fees (blob gas)

Sequencer Profit Margin

90% of L2 gas revenue

90% of L2 gas revenue

0% (No privileged sequencer)

Security Budget Source

Sequencer profit (voluntary)

Sequencer profit (voluntary) + potential token inflation

Protocol-enforced fee burn (EIP-1559) + restaking (EigenLayer)

Annual Security Spend (Est.)

$10-50M (token grants)

$5-20M (inflation + grants)

$100M+ (burned ETH + restaked TVL)

Data Availability Cost

$0.10 - $0.50 per MB (3rd party)

$0.01 - $0.10 per MB (sovereign chain)

$0.03 per blob (Ethereum mainnet)

Economic Alignment

Weak (profit capture vs. public good)

Moderate (chain value tied to sequencer)

Strong (fee burn/securing L1 increases L1 value)

Long-Term Viability Risk

High (race to zero fees, no enforced security spend)

Medium (depends on chain adoption & sequencer honesty)

Low (security funded by L1's inherent monetary premium)

Example of Model in Action

Arbitrum DAO treasury grants

Celestia rollup paying for blob space

Ethereum validators securing EigenDA via restaking

deep-dive
THE REVENUE STACK

Deconstructing the Shared Sequencer Cash Flow

Shared sequencers monetize by capturing and repackaging the value of block space, creating a new revenue layer atop L2s.

Sequencer revenue is arbitrage. A shared sequencer like Espresso Systems or Astria captures MEV from its constituent rollups. It bundles transactions, extracts value via front-running or back-running, and returns a portion to the rollup. The rollup's native sequencer revenue is now a shared sequencer tax.

The profit is in the bundle. The economic moat is cross-rollup liquidity. A shared sequencer enabling atomic swaps between Arbitrum and Optimism creates a unique, valuable block space. This is more profitable than any single rollup's vanilla transaction ordering.

Revenue splits dictate adoption. The fee-sharing model determines if rollups adopt. A model favoring the shared sequencer over the rollup's treasury, like EigenLayer's restaking cut, will fail. Sustainable models must align incentives, making the rollup a profit participant.

Evidence: Espresso's HotShot testnet demonstrates this by allowing rollups to outsource sequencing while maintaining censorship resistance. The cash flow exists only if the shared sequencer provides more value than it extracts.

protocol-spotlight
THE FUTURE OF ROLLUP ECONOMICS

Architectural Bets: How the Giants Are Playing

The monolithic L1 fee market is dead. The next war is over who captures value in the modular stack.

01

The Problem: Sequencer Extractable Value (SEV)

Centralized sequencers are the new miners, capturing MEV on steroids without returning value to the rollup's security budget. This creates a $1B+ annual leakage and a critical centralization vector.

  • Value Drain: Fees and MEV bypass L1 stakers and rollup treasuries.
  • Censorship Risk: A single entity controls transaction ordering and inclusion.
  • Economic Misalignment: Profit incentives diverge from network security.
$1B+
Annual Leakage
1
Critical Point
02

The Solution: Shared Sequencing & MEV-Boost for Rollups

Projects like Astria, Espresso, and Radius are building L2-native decentralized sequencing layers. This creates a competitive market for block space, akin to Ethereum's PBS, but for rollups.

  • Reduced SEV: MEV is competed away, with proceeds potentially shared via proposer-builder separation.
  • Atomic Composability: Enables cross-rollup transactions without centralized trust.
  • Economic Flywheel: Fees can be redirected to fund rollup security (e.g., EigenLayer AVS).
10-100x
More Sequencers
~0ms
Cross-Rollup Latency
03

The Problem: Fragmented Liquidity Silos

Every new rollup fragments capital and user experience. $5B+ in bridged assets sit idle, creating massive opportunity cost. Native yield and DeFi composability are lost in transit.

  • Capital Inefficiency: Assets are stranded, unable to be used as collateral elsewhere.
  • UX Friction: Users manually bridge, paying fees and waiting for 7-day withdrawal periods.
  • Security Discount: Isolated security budgets weaken the overall system.
$5B+
Idle Bridged Assets
7 Days
Worst-Case Withdrawal
04

The Solution: Native Yield & Shared Security Layers

The endgame is restaking primitives like EigenLayer and Babylon turning staked ETH/BTC into a universal cryptoeconomic security layer. Rollups rent security instead of bootstrapping their own validator set.

  • Unified Security: A single stake secures multiple Actively Validated Services (AVSs).
  • Native Yield: Staked assets automatically earn fees from the rollups they secure.
  • Capital Efficiency: LRTs (Liquid Restaking Tokens) become the base collateral for cross-chain DeFi.
$15B+
EigenLayer TVL
>50
AVSs Secured
05

The Problem: Unsustainable Subsidy Models

Rollups today run on VC capital and token emissions, not sustainable fee revenue. When subsidies end, activity collapses. The "block space business" has negative gross margins for most chains.

  • Revenue Crisis: Transaction fees often don't cover L1 data posting costs (blobs).
  • Inflationary Spiral: Token incentives attract mercenary capital that exits post-reward.
  • Misaligned Incentives: Protocols optimize for short-term TVL, not long-term fee generation.
>90%
Subsidy-Dependent
Negative
Gross Margin
06

The Solution: Value-Accrual to the Settlement Layer

Arbitrum's Stylus and Optimism's Law of Chains are experiments in making the L2 a profitable platform. The goal: capture value from hyper-scaled execution and return it to tokenholders via fees, not inflation.

  • Platform Fees: Charge developers for premium VM execution (Stylus) or cross-chain messaging.
  • Profit Sharing: Direct a portion of sequencer profits to a community treasury or buybacks.
  • Sustainable Flywheel: Fees fund security and R&D, reducing reliance on token emissions.
100x
Cheaper Compute
Direct
Value Accrual
counter-argument
THE INCENTIVE REALIGNMENT

The Bull Case: Why This Might (Barely) Work

A shared security audit model realigns economic incentives between rollup sequencers, validators, and users, creating a self-policing system.

Sequencer skin in the game forces honest execution. A shared audit pool, funded by sequencer bonds and transaction fees, pays bounties for proven fraud. This makes malicious behavior economically irrational, as the cost of cheating exceeds the reward.

Validators become profit-seeking auditors. Protocols like EigenLayer and Babylon demonstrate the demand for cryptoeconomic security services. A rollup's validators, staking native tokens or restaked ETH, have a direct financial incentive to detect and report invalid state transitions.

The audit is a public good with a price. Unlike altruistic watchdogs, this model monetizes verification. Systems like Arbitrum's BOLD or Espresso's shared sequencer create markets where proving fraud is a profitable, specialized service, not a volunteer effort.

Evidence: Optimism's RetroPGF has distributed over $40M to ecosystem contributors, proving a willingness to pay for public goods. A security-focused iteration directly funds the system's liveness and correctness guarantees.

risk-analysis
SHARED SECURITY AUDIT

Failure Modes: When the Music Stops

Current rollup economics are a house of cards built on unsustainable subsidies and hidden centralization. Here's where it breaks.

01

The Sequencer MEV Black Box

Centralized sequencers are opaque profit centers, not cost centers. The ~$500M+ annual MEV extracted by dominant rollups is a tax on users and a systemic risk.

  • Problem: Opaque ordering creates value leakage and censorship vectors.
  • Solution: Force sequencer profit transparency and implement shared sequencing pools (e.g., Espresso, Astria) to democratize block building.
$500M+
Annual MEV
1
Central Point
02

The Data Availability Death Spiral

Reliance on a single DA layer (e.g., Ethereum) creates a single point of economic failure. During congestion, ~90% of rollup costs are DA fees, making scaling promises a lie.

  • Problem: Cost structure is hostage to L1 gas auctions.
  • Solution: Modular DA adoption (Celestia, EigenDA, Avail) and blob fee markets to create competition and price stability.
90%
Cost is DA
1
SPOF
03

The Bridge Liquidity Fragility

$20B+ is locked in canonical bridges that are only as secure as their weakest validator set. A 51% attack on a rollup's L1 bridge contract can mint infinite fraudulent withdrawals.

  • Problem: Security is siloed; a rollup failure cascades to its bridge.
  • Solution: Move towards shared security models (EigenLayer, Babylon) and light-client-based verification to unbundle safety from individual chain consensus.
$20B+
TVL at Risk
51%
Attack Threshold
04

The Sovereign Governance Trap

Rollup teams act as benevolent dictators for upgrades and treasury management. This creates political risk and misaligned incentives, where >$1B treasuries are controlled by small foundations.

  • Problem: Code is law until the multisig changes it.
  • Solution: Enforce timelocks, on-chain governance, and forkability as first-class features. Learn from Cosmos SDK app-chains and their social consensus models.
$1B+
Treasury Control
1
Multisig
05

The Interop Liquidity Silos

Rollups are liquidity islands. Moving assets between them relies on third-party bridges (LayerZero, Axelar) or slow canonical bridges, fragmenting capital efficiency and introducing new trust assumptions.

  • Problem: Composable DeFi across rollups is a UX and security nightmare.
  • Solution: Native shared liquidity layers (Chainlink CCIP, Circle CCTP) and universal settlement layers (Layer N, Polymer) that treat rollups as execution shards.
7 Days
Withdrawal Delay
3+
Trust Assumptions
06

The Subsidy Cliff

Current ~$0.01 transaction fees are subsidized by token emissions and sequencer MEV. When token incentives dry up, real costs (~$0.10-$0.50 per tx) will be exposed, killing adoption.

  • Problem: Growth is bought, not earned.
  • Solution: Sustainable models require real revenue from fees and MEV redistribution, not inflationary ponzinomics. Protocols must be profitable at the base layer.
$0.01
Current Cost
$0.50
Real Cost
future-outlook
THE INCENTIVE MISMATCH

The Inevitable Pivot: From Staking to Slashing

Current rollup security models are economically flawed, relying on staking rewards that fail to align sequencer incentives with user safety.

Staking is a subsidy, not a deterrent. Today's rollups like Arbitrum and Optimism use token staking to secure their sequencers, but this creates a principal-agent problem. Sequencers profit from MEV and fees, while stakers earn yield from inflation. Their incentives diverge, making censorship or liveness failures a rational choice when profitable.

Slashing aligns economic survival with protocol health. A shared security audit enforced by slashing bonds, similar to EigenLayer's cryptoeconomic security, makes sequencer malfeasance catastrophic. The sequencer's own capital is the first line of defense, not a passive staker's. This flips the incentive from 'profit sharing' to 'loss avoidance'.

The evidence is in the failure states. No major L2 has executed a meaningful slashing event despite provable downtime. The OP Stack's fault proof system remains unused in production, demonstrating that without a credible slashing threat, the security promise is theoretical. The economic design must make failure more expensive than compliance.

takeaways
SHARED SECURITY AUDIT

TL;DR for Protocol Architects

Rollup economics are broken. The future is shared security models that commoditize execution while monetizing trust.

01

The Problem: Fragmented Security Budgets

Each rollup runs its own sequencer set, forcing them to bootstrap security from scratch. This creates massive capital inefficiency and inconsistent liveness guarantees.\n- Capital Cost: Each chain must fund its own $100M+ validator stake.\n- Operational Risk: Small teams manage critical consensus infrastructure.

$100M+
Per-Chain Cost
10-100x
Inefficiency
02

The Solution: EigenLayer & Shared Sequencers

Restaking pools (EigenLayer) and shared sequencer networks (Espresso, Astria) allow rollups to lease security and decentralization. This turns security into a commoditized service.\n- Capital Efficiency: Tap into Ethereum's $20B+ restaked security pool.\n- Guaranteed Liveness: Inherit robustness from a globally distributed operator set.

$20B+
Security Pool
>10k
Operators
03

The New Business Model: Selling Trust, Not Blockspace

The core revenue shifts from MEV/sequencer fees to security-as-a-service premiums. High-value apps (e.g., perpetual DEXs, institutional bridges) will pay for auditable, cryptoeconomically secured execution.\n- Revenue Stream: Premiums for verified, fault-proofed state transitions.\n- Market Fit: Targets applications where $1M+ in slashing risk deters fraud.

Premium
Revenue Model
$1M+
Slashing Risk
04

The Technical Pivot: Standardized Proof Systems

Shared security requires standardized fraud/validity proofs (e.g., RISC Zero, SP1) to create a universal verification layer. This enables one-to-many security auditing across rollups.\n- Interoperability: A single proof can secure multiple execution environments.\n- Cost Reduction: ~90% lower proving costs via amortization across clients.

~90%
Cost Reduction
One-to-Many
Audit Scale
05

The Execution Risk: Centralized Sequencing Cartels

Shared sequencers (Espresso, Astria) risk recreating L1 validator cartels. Without careful design, MEV extraction and censorship become centralized at the sequencing layer.\n- MEV Risk: Cartels can front-run cross-rollup arbitrage.\n- Censorship: A few nodes can block transactions, breaking neutrality.

Cartel Risk
Centralization
High
MEV Threat
06

The Endgame: Rollups as Feature Layers

Rollups become feature-specific execution layers (gaming, DeFi, social) built atop a unified security base (EigenLayer) and shared sequencing mesh. The L1 becomes a settlement and security coordinator.\n- Specialization: Optimize VMs for specific application logic.\n- Composability: Secure, low-latency communication via shared infrastructure.

Feature-Specific
Rollup Design
Coordinator
L1 Role
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Rollup Economics: Can Shared Sequencers Secure Billions? | ChainScore Blog