a thoughtful web.
Good ideas and conversation. No ads, no tracking.   Login or Take a Tour!
comment by mk
mk  ·  1442 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: Bitcoin breaks above $20,000

Worth noting that Ethereum now beats Bitcoin on every metric (nodes, transactions per day, developers, users, applications, etc.) except for marketcap. As Bitcoin hits its all time high, ETH is at 45% of it's ATH.





thenewgreen  ·  1442 days ago  ·  link  ·  

So you're saying ETH is a "buy?" I wonder when the two won't be as closely tethered. Meaning, will there come a day when ETH is well in the green and BTC is well in the red? Haven't seen that yet. When I open my tracker the entire crypto market seems to rise and fall in unison.

kleinbl00  ·  1442 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Nobody understood this thread

Nobody understood this thread, either

We are about to live in a world where counterfeiting is IMPOSSIBLE. That is due to blockchain technologies such as ERC-721 tokens. Jerome Powell has endorsed a LIBOR replacement that runs on Ethereum. Bitcoin is a portable store of value, sort of the modern equivalent of bearer bonds. Ethereum enables a fundamental reconfiguration of value.

mk  ·  1442 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Most people don't appreciate the differences yet, even many institutional traders.

thenewgreen  ·  1442 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I can understand that most, "people," don't but it's shocking that institutional investors do not. Isn't it their job to do due-diligence on such things? (that sentence mostly exists so I could write due-do.) It's like if Gold and Lithium were both traded as a commodity and tracked together, simply as a store of value and institutional investors failed to recognize that lithium was also being used for battery production and had actual growing utility.

kleinbl00  ·  1442 days ago  ·  link  ·  

"Institutional investors" are generally business majors who have a working, practical knowledge of money. They are diesel mechanics. Cryptocurrency is a fundamentally new store of value - institutional investors regard it much the same as diesel guys would regard fusion.

It is, nonetheless, a commodity and a very thinly traded one at that. The total market cap of all cryptocurrency has yet to eclipse Apple's cash-on-hand, for example.

Most people will form models in their heads to allow them to operate. As George Box said, "All models are wrong, some are useful." Modeling crypto as "goldbugging for nerds and criminals" works up to a point and many funds are diversifying into crypto because at this point if they do they're following the crowd but if they don't they're missing a gold rush. Better to be wrong together than right all alone.

Especially since a more refined model of cryptocurrency requires you to start from "what is money anyway" and nearly zero investors have the interest or expertise to entertain such navel-staring.

mk  ·  1442 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I think there are a lot of savvy institutional investors. But I think there are even more who are not. I've met people in the "crypto space" that aren't very up to speed.