The Fundamentals of Bitcoin’s Value with Phil Geiger
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Phil Geiger is the Managing Director of Concierge Services at Unchained Capital. In this interview, we discuss how a robust protocol and monetary policy, a vital utility for energy producers and a committed community of hodlers, makes Bitcoin an extremely low-risk investment.
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No other scalable commodity, currency or asset has as robust a fixed supply issuance as Bitcoin. 21 million coins. That’s it. The rough consensus governance process, miners’ financial incentives, and a highly decentralized node verification process combine to make this digital scarcity rigid. No altcoin can compete. “Digital scarcity is a one-time phenomenon” - Phil Geiger, April 2020.
There are those that have been pushing the edges of this assumed commitment. They are motivated by different concerns, chiefly that a declining supply will impact security: how can a 51% attack be avoided when the volume of Bitcoin issued becomes significantly low and eventually finishes? Can transaction fees alone secure the network?
But it is the fixed supply schedule that supports Bitcoin’s value, from which all other considerations follow. According to Phil Geiger, these 21 million coins already exist. Both in terms of the supply schedule and the fixed limit. This is what underpins the huge investment by miners: a transparent monetary policy, and scarcity that supports the price. Changes to this could seriously damage minings assimilation into energy production.
This is what makes, in Phil’s view, Bitcoin an extremely low-risk investment compared to other assets (both digital and physical). The proof is in the hodling behaviour. Using Bitcoin is vital for the transition of Bitcoin from a defensive store of value to a productive medium of exchange, the fact that those hodling Bitcoin for more than a year is at an ATH shows investors still remain extremely confident in its long-term success.
So, what about long-term security? Decreasing block rewards will incentivise miners to maximise the use of block space. Combined with more users this should drive up Bitcoin transaction prices, thereby supporting the transition to a post-block reward world. The issue is whether there are enough incentives to ensure miners don’t game the system. This needs to be debated. But, making Bitcoin inflationary isn’t the answer, because this is the essence of Bitcoin.
00:02:01: Introductions, and the HODL Waves
00:08:40: Altcoins and stablecoins, risk and impacts on Bitcoin
00:16:07: Energy production, pricing, and the environment
00:36:48: Climate change
00:45:57: Currency and energy crises
00:51:10: Monopoly on violence, and the best way to form civilisations
01:01:44: Why 21 million Bitcoin is non-negotiable, and Bitcoin's zero inflation rate
01:11:57: Bitcoin's future security
01:25:54: Final comments
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Mentioned in the interview:
Bitcoin Data Science (Pt. 1): HODL Waves (2018) | Unchained Capital Blog
Most of Bangladesh left without power after national grid failure | CNN
'Basically a Savior': Why Crypto Is So Popular in Turkey - CoinDesk, Oct 25th 2022
Global inflation tracker: see how your country compares on rising prices - FT, Nov 3rd 2022
Bangladesh faces power blackout after national grid fails - Al Jazeera, Oct 4th 2022
UK Inflation May Hit 15% Without Further Energy Support - bloomber, Oct 20th 2022
Why high UK energy bills were decades in the making - BBC, Nov 6th 2022
Closure of coal power station set to be delayed to prevent UK blackouts | The Guardian
The easy guide to the Dutch nitrogen crisis, farmers' protests - Dutch Review, Oct 13th 2022
Life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions of energy sources - Wikipedia
What is the Kardashev Scale? - Universe Today, Mar 12th 2022
France’s EDF under pressure to end all outages of nuclear reactors - FT, Sep 2nd 2022
Mises on Government: Size Doesn't Matter - The Objective Standard, Jun 2012
21 Million is Non-Negotiable - Phil Geiger, Unchained Capital, Apr 2020
All 21 Million Bitcoin Already Exist - Phil Geiger, Unchained Capital, Oct 2019
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