View this email in your browser

Bitcoin Market Journal

Over 100,000 crypto investors trust the Journal.



HEALTH, WEALTH, AND HAPPINESS

March 22, 2022

crypto-taxes.jpeg

Thursday 3/24 at 6:30 pm ET: Join us for our online event on How to Manage Your Crypto Taxes.


From buying and selling crypto, to yield farming with DeFi, to flipping NFTs, this panel of crypto tax experts will answer your questions, just in time for the tax deadline.


This online event is free and open for all. Click here to RSVP and get the link to attend.

Whale Reads



Whale Reads

Worthy news for aspiring whales


What is The Merge? (Ethereum.org): Ethereum is planning one of its biggest upgrades yet, switching from Proof of Work (which, like bitcoin, uses an incredible amount of energy) to Proof of Stake (which uses very little energy).


For Ethereum investors, this is a Really Big Deal.


Called "The Merge," this upgrade is now rolling out on test networks, and all appears to be going as planned. If the upgrade rolls out successfully this year, it will be a technological leapfrog past bitcoin, which is still stuck using Proof of Work (with no apparent way out).


Investor takeaway: If you've been thinking about investing in Ethereum, think about what The Merge could mean: the world's largest blockchain development platform, now with a sustainable competitive and technological moat. What are you waiting for?

Your Money is Growing



Your Money is Growing

Truth, in numbers


Here's a look at the energy difference between Proof of Work (like bitcoin and Ethereum today) and Proof of Stake (like Ethereum after The Merge).

energy-pow.png

Above is Proof of Stake, which uses about 5 gigawatts. Below is Proof of Work, which is 2000x smaller, just .0025 gigawatts (also known as 2.5 megawatts). That's 2000x less energy.

energy-pos.png

Courtesy Carl Beekhuizen, Ethereum Foundation


To put this in more concrete terms, today Ethereum uses the energy of a small country; tomorrow Ethereum will use the energy of a small township.


Investor takeaway: Smart investors look for "inflection points" that could radically change the competitive landscape. The Merge, assuming it continues to move forward as planned, will likely be one such inflection point.

evamarie-augustine.png



The Big Picture

with Evamarie Augustine


Hi Everyone,


Earlier this month, Hersheypark—of the eponymous Hershey chocolate bar—announced it would be transitioning to a cashless system.  


The Pennsylvania amusement park cited added convenience for customers as they shop and dine, although roaming food trucks would continue to accept cash.


Add Hersheypark to a long list of businesses that are switching to cashless transactions. 

IMG 1 - 3.22.22 - JPEG .jpg

As the use of paper money declines, accelerated by the pandemic, a growing number of businesses are no longer accepting physical forms of money. The benefits of payment system innovations are too many to list, but what does our dependence on digitization mean?


Even before the pandemic, Pew Research Center data showed 29% of Americans were not using cash to make purchases in a regular week. 


Generationally, younger people were less likely to use cash for such transactions, with 34% of participants below the age of 50 indicating they did not use physical currency to make purchases in an average week, compared to 23% for those who were at least 50. 


Parents are introducing their kids to digital money at younger and younger ages. In an informal poll I conducted on social media, I asked at what age would parents give their children access to digital money, via debit cards or an app.


While most parents indicated they would wait until middle school or high school, 13% said they would provide their child with access to digital funds before they turned 11 years old. Less than 1% said they would wait until college. 


Learning to budget money at an early age is an incredibly important skill, but do we now have an entire generation with a digital trail of their spending habits? Combined with a social media trail that contains personal views on policy and government, this data could have enormous implications.


If governments switch to central bank digital currencies—and currently 91 countries are actively researching digital forms of their fiat currency or have implemented one already, how does this fit into the equation? Armed with greater data on their consumers, governments could perform closer surveillance on their citizens.


Recently, U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH), chairman of the Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee Chairman, noted the inherent dangers of anonymous crypto transactions in a hearing on digital assets, “Understanding the Role of Digital Assets in Illicit Finance." 


However, the possibility that CBDCs could enable more potent government surveillance is just as real. 


I appreciate all your likes, follows and comments! As always, thank you for reading. 


Make it a great day! 

Evamarie Augustine

Market Analyst

Spread This Meme



Spread this Meme

Copy, paste, and post


meme-reverse.png

If you don't understand what you're investing in, back up.

Bitcoin Market Journal is a daily newsletter that makes you a better crypto investor. It is created by Evamarie Augustine, Charles Bovaird, Mati Greenspan, John Hargrave, and Alexandre Lores.


Paid subscribers get full access to our top crypto picks; both free and paid subscribers get content to build you into a better investor.


Upgrade to paid, and become a Blockchain Believer!

Facebook  LinkedIn  Twitter  YouTube