Do you mean deflationary?
Yes, my bad, I misspoke in that post.
I am just curious, is there any crypto that doesn't generate more coins after the Initial coin introduction?
Do you mean deflationary?
Tulips and the south Sea were country specific, bitcoin is global.
I am just curious, is there any crypto that doesn't generate more coins after the Initial coin introduction?
I have no idea how many of the freshly mined coins are sold right away but OK say its half and your figure of 18 M usd. Thats not much globally considering many folks have not bought any and more will be able to via standard routes with market etfs etc via stockbrokers.This is a good point but it only means that the pool of possible incoming holders is bigger. And there were ponzis in history that happened in multiple countries. It doesn't mean eventually it won't run out (of incoming money), specially that because other cryptos do exist plus forks, bitcoin isn't really unique or limited.
So it will just take LONGER. As I mentioned the high price has to be supported by more and more money. Right now it is 18 mill PER DAY (assuming half of the new coins sold right away).
But let's imagine the future. Let's say BTC is 1 million bucks. Do you know what is the necessary amount every day to keep that price up? 1 billion dollar! So tell me just how long bitcoin (or actually the world) would be able to keep up pouring 1 billion bucks per day into the system to keep that price up?
Ripple and iota are premined.
1. say its half and your figure of 18 M usd. Thats not much globally
2. The mining rate of bitcoins is slowing down.
Lots of cryptos collapse. Only a few will survive. Bitcoin is at the stage Facebook is at. It dominates the space and if new coins come up with some unique features it can just copy them. Bitcoin and ether dominate the market cap and get all the free publicity. They are also a bit different by design.1. I agree, globally it is not that bad. But the expectation is that the price will go much higher, so this "needed to support price" new money will also go up. And not just for Bitcoin but for every appreciating crypto. LTC needs 2 million per day using the same assumption.
So because this problem exist for all cryptos, the increase in minimum new money needed is exponential, or some crypto has to collapse.
2. Not fast enough. If we were talking about finishing mining in a decade, that would be fast, but for the next 20-30 years this downward pressure will exist.
1. I agree, globally it is not that bad. But the expectation is that the price will go much higher, so this "needed to support price" new money will also go up. And not just for Bitcoin but for every appreciating crypto. LTC needs 2 million per day using the same assumption.
You also seem to be picking numbers out of the air e.g. miners selling coins. I am not interested in getting into a technical debate on inflation or deflation I just want to make money. To me the new coins are not enough to satisfy the demand which is why the price is going up. It is just fecking obvious. So as long as that is the case go long. At some point I may go short but not now.Doesn't matter. As long as more is made than lost, it is INFLATIONARY by definition and design.
Almost all cryptos are.
Now if you want to bring lost coins into the picture, they were lost mostly in the past, so from the loss of the last big chunk there are still more coins. The lost coins only effect the eventual numbers, but since new ones are constantly generated, it inflates (or dilutes if you wish) the existing ones.
Unless you can prove we lose 1900+ coins a day, you are either clueless or lying.
e.g. miners selling coins.