Market Lab Report / Dr. K's Crypto-Corner
by Dr. Chris Kacher
Nuclear Physics vs. Trading Cryptocurrencies
I have often said trading crypto is like riding your own personal nuclear powered rocket. The volatility is well beyond what I have ever experienced in stocks even during the dot-com boom. Fortunes can be made or lost in days, especially if one dabbles in leveraged futures cryptotrading. The emotions of greed (FOMO) and fear (FUD) are amplified an order of magnitude above "10".
In the days of pursuing new elements, it was fascinating to observe Einstein's theory of relativity in action at the 88" cyclotron at the University of California Berkeley where I helped put two elements on the Periodic Table. We named Element 106 Seaborgium after Nobel Laureate Glenn Seaborg, the legendary scientist who discovered 10 elements including plutonium, and statesman who advised 10 U.S. Presidents, who also strongly suggested I pursue a Ph.D. at Berkeley in the nuclear sciences thus became my Ph.D. thesis advisor. But I greatly disappointed the man after doing a 180 by switching upon graduating with my Ph.D. into trading for William O’Neil. Both men, legendary, so I would argue better to pursue your passion. I also am fond of saying the first day working for William O’Neil was the last day I ever worked. Do whatever it takes to make your passion your livelihood. Life is short.
But What About Ethereum?
Ethereum (ETH) most likely has the second longest half-live of the cryptocurrencies. It has one of the top development teams. They have come out with Berlin which helps increase transaction times while slightly reducing fees but the real major jump will be this July when they release EIP-1559 which will make Ethereum deflationary by burning ETH thus making its supply even more scarce. Ethereum already has a supply shortage based on the migration of Ethereum out of exchanges into long term storage, DeFi and NFTs locking up a substantial amount of ETH, institutions and companies starting to recognize Ethereum in addition to bitcoin, and the launch of Ethereum ETFs. EIP-1559 if successfully launched, should propel the price of Ethereum by at least an order of magnitude from here, $4042 as of this writing, based on supply and demand.
Meanwhile, direct layer 1 competitors such as Cardano (ADA) and Binance (BNB) may co-exist if their fees and transaction times remain well below that of Ethereum's. Ethereum's transaction fees remain high but offers the greatest network effect thus its level of security would appeal to larger companies who can afford the higher fees. Smaller companies may opt for Cardano and Binance due to the lower fees even though security and decentralization are not as robust.
Layer 2 companies such as Fantom (FTM), Solana (SOL), Polygon (MATIC), and Harmony (ONE) which co-exist alongside ETH offer superior scalability thus their transaction times are a huge help to ETH as both platform can be used together.
While some think decentralized computer cryptocompanies such as ETH, Cardano (ADA), and EOS can co-exist much as PCs such as Dell and Compaq hit their stride in the 1990s and beyond, ETH has a powerful network effect in the form of its level of security. While companies can easily port over to ADA, it is less likely if the company is large and has integrated ETH as ETH's fees are less of an issue.
Meanwhile, should Bitcoin eventually solve its scaling issues and make it simple for companies to port over, it is likely to dominate since it is the most secure network with its towering hash rate. Time will tell, though right now, it looks as if Bitcoin with its disinflationary protocol and its SoV (store-of-value) killer app will co-exist with Ethereum with its up-and-coming deflationary coinmetrics.