Kusama Staking Rates - A discussion in the aftermath of referendum 238

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Good day,

In the aftermath of referendum 238 (Suggesting an increase of the minimum commission), I would like to open the floor for a discussion on the broader topic of staking rates on the Kusama network.

The voting data obtained from referendum 238 served a greater purpose. It demonstrated that there is legitimate interest on the topic of staking rates and the sustainability of operations for independent validators.

While I agree that increasing the minimum commission is not an absolute answer to the problem; there was a majority (61% by weight) who wished to steer the chain in this direction.

Voting results (by number) To share some brief highlights of information captured within 6 hrs of the votes' end. The results are:

  • 411 (27%) Validators, 338 (23%) Nominators and 749 (50%) undefined (neither) participated in the vote.

With percentages respective to the total vote:

  • 311 (23%) Validators, 124 (8%) Nominators and 474 (32%) of the undefined voted AYE
  • 72 (5%) Validators, 214 (14%) Nominators and 275 (18%) of the undefined voted NAY

Interesting facts

  • 40 (55.5%) of the 72 validators who voted against the referendum maintains a commission that is > 8.5%
  • 180 (84%) of the 214 nominators who voted against the referendum nominate a validator with a commission > 8.5%

It is also quite interesting that there are a number of voters who vote against things like upgrading the chain's runtime.

Of the 71 accounts that voted against Kusama's runtime upgrade (referendum 239), 70 of them participated in referendum 238. From the 70, 1 voted AYE and 69 voted NAY.

If it becomes necessary I would like to produce the data by weight at the last block of the vote. Unfortunately my queries used derive functions which doesn't play well with .at.

 

State of staking rates

Amidst the discussion with referendum 238, I didn't get a sense that many appreciated the overarching state of staking rates and what the chain is (or may) be trying to achieve.

The chain's inflation rate is constant but the amount that is distributed to the treasury and to staking is determinant on the ideal staking rate. Simply put, what doesn't go to staking goes to the treasury.

I would like to identify two out of the three zones; less than ideal and greater than ideal.

When the chain is less than ideally staked it generally encourages staking by increasing staking rewards with each bond added. When it is staked greater than ideal it discourages staking by reducing staking rewards.

In my opinion, the first zone (less than ideal) seems to encourage staking so that the chain can attain high levels of security (backing), this is all good! The second zone seems to discourage staking to encourage other utilization of tokens, perhaps for crowdloans?

We are currently in the second zone and staking rewards have dropped almost by half when compared to the ideal. It should encourage persons to remove their stake but this effect isn't yet seen.

The differential of staking rewards is also going to the treasury which is already quite full. There is also the effect of a squeeze on smaller validator's returns via commission and sustainability of their operations. This is enhanced due to current market conditions.

 

Suggestions

I agree that fluctuations of market prices make it difficult to set an absolute 'best' commission level. I do however, believe there is value to looking at staking levels.

Perhaps when the treasury is full and we are above the ideal staking level we could:

  1. Reduce the amount that goes to the treasury
  2. Increase in the 'effective commission' which is the current minimum + an increasing amount x.

This would imo allow a flexible means by which funds could be transferred to validators during times when generally staking rewards would diminish.

Adam suggested:

  • burned treasury funds get allocated to validators who earned points during that spending period (First suggested by bLd)
  • minimum required block tip on all transactions, 'merica style 🇺🇸
  • treasury-subsidized programs that actively pay validators (e.g. TVP gets a quarterly grant to compensate its participants, nominator pools receive grants to actively pay the validators they nominate)

Also suggested

  • It was also suggested that as an intermediary step a lower rate of commission be proposed.
  • Generally there are concerns that if the commission rate goes up then it may never lower.

To note with the last point that it is possible for us to schedule a decrease (return to 3%) as part of a batch.

 

Independent Validators within the 1KV

In light of the decreased rewards on chain and market conditions, the 1KV allowed an increase of commission by 50% . This has helped shield members of the programme as they can now operate at 15% commission without any risk of not being elected into the active set.

I believe that the rationale behind the decision to increase the maximum commission has merit outside of the 1KV. I am a proud member of the 1KV but I was discouraged to hear some members vote Nay because they're not affected.

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