p-townag said:
TexasRebel said:
Why must it continue to increase in value? <crickets>
You're stuck playing checkers on a chessboard.
Companies that facilitate transactions don't do it for free, which is already a problem. The cost just gets hidden in the item price; by law. There isn't a business in existence that wouldn't prefer to ditch the transaction fees. Why would anyone want to make them permanent?
It must increase in value because it has a use, which creates demand. Price is set by supply and demand. The supply is absolutely fixed, yet as more and more people adopt it and demand it, the price will go up. Simple economics.
Because when something has value, people are willing to pay for it. So people will continue to pay the transaction fees because it's worth it.
But it doesn't have a use.
It's literally just a digital collectible. Bitcoin just like an NFT.
It's too expensive to transact so will never become adopted as a widespread form of payment. This flaw nullifies all of the attributes that make it desirable. Maybe you'll see it one day.
Trading is taking place off of the blockchain, making it pointless. The primary value proposition was not needing a trusted third party. The market has evolved in a way where trusted 3rd parties are required.
It has become like digital gold because it's not going to be used as a currency.
But gold has industrial uses that create a floor for the price even if nobody cares to own it as an inflation hedge.
Bitcoins don't have any industrial use.
It's extremely volatile.
It's marketed by exchanges and other Bitcoin holders for their own self interest in generating trade activity and raising demand.
It may be the first digital asset class, but it still produces nothing new of value.
My thesis is that slowly people will catch on that it's just a digital collectible and the price will stagnate and just go sideways indefinitely with volatile trading action. There is clearly a base of holders with a religious like belief in it, and so I guess they'll be around to keep it from going to zero.
I saw some potential in crypto in the past, but my position has evolved as it became increasingly evident that it's simply a digital collectible with no value proposition to drive demand.
Its original value proposition was its ability to be transacted without needing the oversight of government or banks. That's become pointless because it's too expensive with Bitcoin, so people trust their banks and credit cards processors enough to prefer them to Bitcoin.
Being anonymous was also a bonus that created demand which has gone away for Bitcoin. And blockchains like Monero that provide anonymity have been removed from exchanges.
Bitcoins two main attributes for its demand, low cost peer to peer transfers, and anonymity, are no longer applicable.
What's left is a wave of greater fools buying it only because "number go up."
I think its price stands on a foundation of sand. It's become increasingly centralized. Early adopters will forever promote it because it's profitable for them. They want someone to keep buying their digital tokens at high prices, so they've built up a lot of hype and hollow abstractions to convince people to buy it.
And as for the ETFs, there are thousands of ETFs that I don't see any need to own them or their underlying. Crypto ETFs included.