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What kind of assets are cryptocurrencies: an em...

Nic Carter
October 30, 2019

What kind of assets are cryptocurrencies: an empirical evaluation

Nic Carter

October 30, 2019
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  1. • Answer the question: what sort of payment system are

    cryptocurrencies? • How are they used in practice? • Where are they situated in the taxonomy of current payment systems? • What does this mean for bitcoin? For cryptocurrencies generally? Objectives of this talk
  2. A simple typology of payments systems Cryptocurrency at the base

    layer appears most conceptually similar to physical cash payments or to wire transfers
  3. Sources: U.S. Consumer Cash Use, 2012 and 2015: An Introduction

    to the Diary of Consumer Payment Choice, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston (2017) Statistics on payment, clearing and settlement systems in the CPMI countries, Bank of International Settlements (2017) Summary stats on payment systems (U.S.)
  4. Visualizing the differences in payment systems Source: Statistics on payment,

    clearing and settlement systems in the CPMI countries, Bank of International Settlements (2017)
  5. Federal Reserve Payments Study, 2016 The inverse relationship between txn

    count and value in payment systems • Payment systems like debit and credit cards make up the lion’s share of transactions by count (cash not included on this chart) • Settlement/clearing networks like ACH and checks constitute most of the value
  6. • Txn count versus avg txn size Source: Coin Metrics,

    Federal Reserve Boston, BIS Cryptoasset throughput versus other payment/settlement systems • Major cryptoassets appear bounded by throughput on the base layer • Should we treat them like settlement networks? • Note: this data set only includes transfers of native units, not 0- value or token transactions
  7. Source: Coin Metrics • The chart on the left tracks

    transfers of native units (i.e. BTC on Bitcoin and ETH on Ethereum) while ignoring transactions attributable to other purposes, such as the insertion of arbitrary data • Most cryptoassets exhibit high average transaction sizes, and generally demonstrate few transactions per day • In practice cryptocurrencies are used for large, infrequent transactions • Notice that the stablecoins all have relatively large average transaction sizes Cryptocurrencies usage characteristics
  8. Some typologies are empirically evident • This analysis covers 60

    cryptoassets and tokens accounting for 95% of the market • Stablecoins exhibit far more transactional value per unit of market cap than their peers, evidencing unique usage patterns • This implies that stablecoins are distinct from generic cryptoassets in that they have more transactional volume than their market cap would imply Source: Coin Metrics
  9. SoV versus MoE: a distinction without a difference? • Physical

    cash is used both as a transactional medium but also as a store of value • The use of cash as a SoV has been rising in most countries, contrary to what many believe • Declining interest rates make cash more attractive to hold (as the opportunity cost declines) • As interest rates keep falling, cash and cash-like assets continue to look more attractive Source: Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
  10. Cash usage for SoV purposes is skyrocketing “Demand for currency

    is growing, particularly as a store of value” – Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
  11. Bitcoin / crypto banks? • Hal Finney (and many others)

    foresaw a world where Bitcoin operates as a high-powered auditable reserve currency / bank collateral / settlement medium • ETH locked in DeFi = collateral for permissionless banking
  12. Notes: • Coinbase, GBTC, Mt Gox / Mt Gox Trustee,

    Xapo, and XBT Provider data is accurate as of the most recent entry, but historical entries are interpolated and are hence just estimates • This is a lower bound on custodial BTC and is not exhaustive Sources: Coin Metrics, Grayscale, XBT Provider, Meltem Demirors Bitcoin – high-powered crypto-bank collateral?
  13. Should cryptocurrencies optimize for economic density? Source: Coin Metrics •

    Economic density measures the dollar-equivalent value of a single byte of final blockchain data ingested by nodes • A system settling significant amounts of value while maintaining the cost- effectiveness of full nodes would have a very high economic density • Note that this dataset only measures native token transactions (ERC20 txns are not included), so token-heavy chains are underrated by this measure