Oil, wheat, and gold all trade on open markets. Computing power could be next.
Demand for AI chips has blown past supply. So a wave of firms is racing to turn raw computing power into something you can buy, sell, and trade.
And crypto is building the plumbing.
The Shortage Behind The Boom
The problem is simple. Everyone building AI needs strong chips, and there aren't enough to go around.
The top chips, mostly made by Nvidia, now come with waits close to a year. That's a long time when AI moves this fast.
Big labs are buying chips faster than makers can ship them. The little guys get stuck at the back of the line.
That gap has sent smaller AI teams hunting for power anywhere they can find it, even the chips that fill big data centers.
It's a classic supply crunch, too many buyers and not enough to sell. Shortages like that always create a market.
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Where Crypto Comes In
This is the opening crypto projects have waited for. Networks like Render, Akash, io.net, and Bittensor pool spare chips from around the world and rent them out.
Each one runs a marketplace that matches chips to the people who need them.
The pitch is cheaper power. These networks often beat the big cloud firms by a wide margin, sometimes by half or more.
The chips don't sit in one place. They live in homes, offices, and old mining sites, all linked through the network.
Some of that supply comes from Bitcoin miners putting their gear to new use.
The setup also pays the people who share their chips, which pulls in even more supply.
More chips on the network mean lower prices, which pulls in more buyers.
Firms like Luxor Technology are going further. They want to finance the hardware, broker the deals, and one day trade computing power itself.
Big exchanges are circling too, with plans for markets where compute trades like any other commodity.
If that works, a startup could buy an hour of computing as easily as a share of stock.
Worth Noting
The numbers show real use, not just hype. Akash handled a record $5 million in computing spend in the first quarter.
Another network, io.net, has pulled in more than $20 million. That hints that buyers keep coming back.
Render, a third network, has handled more than 68 million rendering jobs to date.
These are still small sums next to the big cloud firms. But the growth is what has investors paying attention.
Compute is slowly becoming a thing you rent by the hour, not a machine you own.
The whole AI crypto sector was worth north of $28 billion as of March. That's a lot of money betting that compute becomes the next thing we trade.
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