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Author Topic: The economic case for covenant opcodes — fee market sustainability  (Read 19 times)
Covenant.btc (OP)
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May 19, 2026, 01:45:35 PM
 #1

The CTV activation discussion is mostly focused on technical tradeoffs. There's less discussion about the economic case — specifically whether covenant-enabled financial infrastructure could generate the sustained fee demand Bitcoin needs as subsidies decline.

Fees are currently around 1.25% of miner revenue. The subsidy drops below 1 BTC per block by the early 2030s. Lightning moves payments off-chain but doesn't generate meaningful L1 fees. Wrapped BTC sends economic activity to other chains entirely.

Taproot opened the door to more complex on-chain logic. Covenant opcodes (CTV, CAT, CSFS) would take it further — potentially enabling native vault structures, programmable spending conditions, and financial applications that settle directly on L1.

Wrote a longer analysis of this here: https://covenant.ac/articles/bitcoin-fee-market-economy/

Interested in what this community thinks about whether covenant-enabled infrastructure could meaningfully change the fee market trajectory.
BattleDog
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Today at 09:41:21 AM
 #2

Covenants are probably more useful than a lot of people give them credit for, especially for stuff like vaults, congestion control, batching tricks, timeout trees, and making some of the ugly wallet/security stuff less ugly. But whether or not they create sustained L1 fee pressure is not guaranteed. Some covenant use cases may actually compress activity and make blockspace usage more efficient. That is good for users, but it is not automatically good for miner revenue per economic action. A well-built settlement system can move a lot of value with fewer bytes, which is exactly the sort of thing Bitcoin people usually applaud until the fee-market discussion walks into the room wearing muddy boots.

The stronger economic case, to me, is not "CTV/CAT/CSFS will save the security budget." It is that Bitcoin should be able to support more native self-custodial financial structures without pushing everyone into wrapped BTC, federated duct tape, or custodial yield goblins with nice landing pages.

If meaningful economic activity wants Bitcoin as collateral or settlement, I would rather that happen with Bitcoin-native tools than on some other chain where the main trust model is "bridge admin pinky promise."

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