Cryptocurrencies

As New Rivals Develop, Ethereum’s Supremacy May Dwindle

Morgan Stanley’s global investment office has produced research on Ethereum (ETH), stating that the blockchain’s dominance might be endangered if market rivalry becomes fierce.

Morgan Stanley said that Ethereum’s smart contract dominance might be lost to cheaper and quicker blockchains, a claim made by advocates of the Ethereum killer market, which includes networks like Cardano (ADA), Solana (SOL), Polkadot (DOT), and Tezos (XTZ):

 

“Ethereum is now facing more competition. The competition in the smart contract sector is higher than Bitcoin in the store-of-value market.” The market share of Ethereum’s smart contract platform might be lost by competitors that are faster or less costly.”

 

Risk Factor in Ethereum

 

Ethereum is a higher-risk investment than Bitcoin, according to the investment bank, since it faces greater competition in the smart contract business than “Bitcoin does in the store-of-value market.” Fewer transactions per user are necessary to ‘use’ Bitcoin, which is analogous to a decentralized savings account. The demand for Ethereum is becoming more and more correlated with transactions. As a result, according to the research, scaling constraints have a greater influence on Ethereum demand than they do on Bitcoin demand.

Related Post

 

Other concerns about the network included the changing regulatory status of Ethereum-based apps like as Decentralized Finance (DeFi) and nonfungible tokens (NFTs), which might be subject to stricter rules in the future, resulting in decreasing demand for Ethereum transactions.

 

The paper also emphasized Ethereum’s centralization, saying that the majority of Ether’s supply is held by a “very small number of accounts”: “It’s less decentralized than Bitcoin, with the top 100 addresses controlling 39% of Ether, compared to 14% in Bitcoin.”

 

The Morgan Stanley report claimed that Ethereum has a larger addressable market than Bitcoin, that it has deflationary characteristics thanks to its transaction-based burning mechanism, and that its performance will improve significantly once it switches to a proof-of-stake consensus mechanism: “Ethereum has a considerably larger addressable market than Bitcoin and thus has the potential to be worth more than Bitcoin.

Recent Posts

AUD/JPY Climbs Back to 102.20, Halting Losses

Key Points: AUD/JPY broke below a rising wedge, signalling possible bearish momentum, with immediate resistance at 103.00 and support at…

1 hour ago

EUR/JPY Hit 168.25, Boosted by 0.3% Q1 GDP Growth

Key Points EUR/JPY Rises to 168.25: Strengthened by robust Eurozone economy and steady ECB policy. Eurozone GDP Grew by 0.3%…

1 hour ago

Chinese Electric Vehicle Market: Nio Stock Up 20%

Key Points: Nio's shares hit 44.20 HKD, up 20%, with electric vehicle deliveries up 134.6% year-on-year to 15,620. BYD leads…

1 day ago

Ethereum Price Dips Below $3,120 Amid Market Slump

Key Points: Ethereum fell sharply from $3,355 to a low of $2,813, reflecting high volatility and sensitivity to market dynamics.…

1 day ago

Stock Markets: Nikkei Down 0.1%, Hang Seng Up 2.4%

Key Points Nikkei 225 slightly fell by 0.1%, while the Hang Seng index surged by 2.4%. USD/JPY increased slightly, highlighting…

1 day ago

Gold Price Increases to ₹71,278 and $2,328

Key Points: Gold prices rose on MCX India to ₹71,278/10 gm and COMEX US to $2,328/oz. The US Dollar Index…

1 day ago

This website uses cookies.