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Howdy, HODLers! Here's what's new. |
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State of Ethereum Q3 (Bankless): For those wanting to see Ethereum's "quarterly financials" in an easy-to-read summary, check out this summary report (which we've simplified below). Investor takeaway: ETH is growing like a weed. |
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So far this year, ETH is up in daily users. In blockchain, more users generally means more value. |
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Today I’m going to say some unpopular things about the world of Decentralized Finance (DeFi). - DeFi is filled with gamblers and speculators who are placing increasingly risky bets.
- DeFi is building not the future of finance, but a parallel version of our riskiest financial markets.
- Most people will lose money in DeFi, because of the sky-high gas fees (far more than any bank would charge).
- DeFi is not a technology for the people, but for the whales who already own enormous amounts of crypto wealth.
- Like our current financial system, DeFi is making the rich richer and the poor poorer.
For most people, the best investing strategy is simply to buy a DeFi token, then hold it long-term (5+ years) – not using the DeFi websites themselves. To use an example from the real world: you could either put money in a banking savings account, or you could just buy the bank. With DeFi, for most of us, it makes way more sense to just buy the blockchain. The crazy thing is, I am a believer in DeFi. It’s a global game-changer. This tech is going to radically disrupt the banking, finance, and insurance industries … and these clowns have no idea what’s coming. However, in its current state, DeFi is dangerous. It should come with a warning: DEFI MAY BE DANGEROUS TO YOUR WEALTH. |
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The Dangers of Jenga Towers Let’s begin with the idea of lending protocols like Aave. First, there’s the confusing and jargon-filled description of what Aave actually is. From the Aave website: "Aave is an open source and non-custodial liquidity protocol for earning interest on deposits and borrowing assets." I could easily picture this as a Dilbert strip: |
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I’ll translate this for you. Aave lets users borrow and loan crypto … not from banks, but from each other. That’s a pretty cool vision, until you understand that borrowed crypto has to be overcollateralized (more jargon), which basically means if you want to borrow $10,000 worth of ETH, you actually need to put in $15,000 as a deposit. Why would anyone do this? In the real world, if you wanted to go buy a $100,000 house, you wouldn’t give the bank $150,000 to take out a loan – you’d just buy the stupid house. Why would I borrow instead of selling my assets? "Users are mainly borrowing for unexpected expenses, leveraging their holdings or for new investment opportunities." I’ll translate this for you. - “Borrowing for unexpected expenses” means you don’t have enough money to pay the rent or buy groceries. Why are you investing in crypto if you don’t have enough money to live? For God's sake, sell the crypto and get your finances in order first.
- “Leveraging their holdings” means people are essentially gambling: putting $10,000 worth of ETH on the craps table, so they can roll it into $15,000 of ETH because they’re sure it’s going to the moon. If they’re wrong and ETH crashes, their position is auto-liquidated (more jargon: it means “we’ll sell your crypto”) and they lose it all.
- “New investment opportunities” is similar, except here they’re gambling $10,000 of ETH on $15,000 of BillyBobToken. If BBT doesn’t pan out, they’ve lost BillyBobToken and the ETH.
Worse, some people will then take the $15,000 of BillyBobToken and go put it into another DeFi site where they can borrow $22,500 of PooCoin. They can continue this stacking up of loans upon loans, which leads to the famous Jenga Tower scene from The Big Short: |
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This is what's happening now in DeFi. There are other use cases for Aave – avoiding taxes, arbitrage, and so on – but these are complex for the average investor. Do you have 40 hours a week to work on crypto? Are you ready to obsessively monitor the price of every crypto asset? Do you hate restful sleep? Most of us have lives. For most of us, borrowing on DeFi protocols like Aave is time-consuming and dangerous. But what if we work the other side: what if we simply lend? The Dangers of Fees The premise of all DeFi platforms is the same, and I will explain it simply:
- Put crypto into our platform and you will earn interest, plus our token. (Put it into Aave and you earn interest, plus AAVE).
- The more crypto flows into our platform, the more our token will go up in price. (Your AAVE is worth more.)
- You can cash out any time, taking the interest and the token.
Sounds pretty great! New DeFi projects reward early users with 100%, 10,000%, or 100,000% interest rates, which causes some people to go berserk. They chase the latest thing, looking to mine those early tokens that could go 100x, 10,000x, or even 100,000x. I subscribe to all the DeFi newsletters, and they are constantly hyping these projects and how much money everyone is making. What they leave out is the fees. Ethereum has the most expensive fees in the world. Way more expensive than any bank. More expensive than some loan sharks. Let's say you wanted to deposit $1,000 into the Aave platform (different DeFi projects call it “Vaults” or “Lending Pools” or “Liquidity Pools” – more jargon). Here’s the confirmation screen: |
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Persistence: The Opposite of Boredom
In a recent column, we talked about the Boredom Syndrome, which is a bad habit of our brains that we always need to be doing something. (Says the guy who puts out a daily newsletter.)
The opposite of boredom is not excitement, but persistence. Letting things play out. Giving it time.
The idea of HODLing is essentially PERSISTENCE. Don’t sell through market panics: hold your investments.
The idea of “Diamond Hands,” popularized on r/wallstreetbets, is essentially PERSISTENCE. Your hand is strong: don’t sell it.
If you’ve been using our Investor Mindset MP3 series (guided meditations for investors), you’ll see how hard it is to persist in just sitting there. Our brains crave activity. You’re trying to sit in silence, and suddenly you realize you’ve been thinking about the grocery store for the last three minutes.
There is a direct correlation between this frenetic mental activity and frenetic investing activity. The two go hand in hand.
The reason you're persisting in these exercises – and the reason we’re persisting in developing them – is because they’re golden tools to train your brain.
When we train our brains, we become better investors. Better internal persistence builds better external persistence. It’s all connected.
If you’ve persisted with us since Week 1, you’re probably starting to see small changes in your thinking already. You may be calmer, more self-assured. You may be less anxious, less depressed. You’re probably having new insights into investing. Trust them.
I encourage you to keep persisting. Paid subscribers can get the entire series here, including Episode 5:
Remember: I’m a DeFi Believer. I’m invested. But the hardest lesson to learn in this fast-moving space is when to just quietly persist.
Learn to persist. It’s another investing superpower.
Health, wealth, and happiness, |
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John Hargrave Publisher Bitcoin Market Journal |
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We feel your pain, Carter. |
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Bitcoin Market Journal is a daily newsletter focusing on blockchain and crypto investments. It is written and edited by Evamarie Augustine, Charles Bovaird, Mati Greenspan, John Hargrave, and Alex Lielacher.
Paid subscribers get full access to our top crypto picks; both free and paid subscribers get content to build them into better investors.
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