Avatar
SatoshiSan
7c6917d8fb4ea38ed21c1bc53660c415c7d4bbbba67e84c4aff0d8597d6b0f9b
Father & son 🙃 #BTC

I would sponsor the domain: nosecond.best Thought to do it on myown, but no skill 😄

Replying to Avatar jimmysong

Riffing on the Stock-to-Flow Model

—————————————

In the jungle of the fiat world, there are crafty creatures known as scammers who have a distinct trait: they never admit they're wrong. You could proclaim, "Hey, this isn't working!" They'd shake their heads, waggle a finger, and claim you simply misunderstood. Suggest that Bitcoin would be a more useful route? They'd passionately argue for a convoluted token system. Even if you stated the obvious - that the sky is blue - they'd spin doubts about your statement by talking about its purple hues.

You see, scammers, like poker players, know that a single misstep can shatter the illusion of trust they've carefully built up with their victims. They've been so deeply conditioned to lie that they'll parry any perceived attack, all to maintain their delicate house of cards.

Now, let me make it clear, I'm aiming to be brutally honest with myself. I've previously analyzed the stock-to-flow model and, with conviction, declared it the only price model that made sense with me. While that hasn't changed entirely (though that says more about price models than this particular one), I've realized that something making sense doesn't necessarily make it true.

The past 18 months have been a philosophical sabbatical from the price-driven narrative of Bitcoin, mainly because this particular set of models have let us down. It was wrong, and there's nothing like a major error to trigger some deep self-reflection. So, armed with introspection and hopefully, some humility, I pen this article.

Let's revisit the source - the stock-to-flow model. My understanding of it, and I suspect, many others, hails from Saifedean Ammous's enlightening work, *The Bitcoin Standard*. It suggests that the existing stock of an asset, coupled with its annual increase, reveals how challenging it is for us humans to accumulate or create more of it. This is the core concept, and it's a handy tool for understanding relative scarcity and the effort needed to obtain a certain resource.

However, the model is a very different thing. Initially, the S2F model was a clever method to link an asset's stock-to-flow ratio with its market cap. At first glance, it seemed plausible; scarcity does, after all, influence price. But, as I reflected, I realized that scarcity is just one cog in the vast machinery of price determination.

Scarcity can nudge supply and possibly demand, but there's so much more involved. When it comes to supply, think about the influence of knowledge, technology, labor, and time. On the demand side, factors multiply - potential uses of the asset, liquidity, portability, and so on. So, the price, and thus, the market cap of an asset, isn't a straightforward equation of a single variable like scarcity.

In retrospect, I see now that many of us, myself included, yearned for this model to hold true. We were seduced by the possibility that since the supply of Bitcoin is so predictable and known, we could perhaps also do the same with price. The S2F/S2FX models promised the allure of future knowledge in the rollercoaster ride that is Bitcoin's global adoption.

Could there still be a model out there that accurately mirrors price? Possibly. But as with any hypothesis, it must stand the test of accuracy. If it doesn't hit the mark, it's time to swallow our pride and admit we got it wrong. It didn't and I was wrong.

As far as i understand it is a fault tollarance problem. As you accept more tollarance, you are still in it for the ride. Or what did i miss here?

Zoltan Pozsar about Bitcoin @ ingoldwetrust.report:

I also find it comical that central banks in the West are trying to do CBDCs because that’s how they want to take the wind out of Bitcoin’s sails or something. I guess they don’t get it that the people that buy Bitcoin don’t buy it because it’s digital, they buy it because it’s outside of state control and it cannot be printed.

I'm from europe. Not sure how US people feel about this. However the "every interaction visible to all", is quiet scarry to me. There are laws which are protecting government interactions to be visible for good reasons. Imagine your tax statment beeing visible. Even if anyone would now i did or didn't pay my taxes yet.

I feel like there's not enough content on #nostr to keep it engaging. Don't want, but often have to go back to the blue bird.

I've found it on Snort on Desktop, but not on Amethys on Mobile.

Via preference

But how do i change the zap amount? It's always kinda to high 😁

Can't vote on Amethyst?

What about you? What are you up to, since retired from BTC core?

Kinda odd to post bird links in here... not really supporting this #nostr plattform.

Well done for the appearance!

Kinda odd to post bird links in here... not really supporting this #nostr plattform.