warmleyseagull
Well-known member
So crypto companies with large contracts with business and organisations that pay them have no intrinsic value?
What about IoTex who recently were awarded a contract with the US Navy to develop a system that supercharges their ability to record and store medical records?
No value?
What about Arweave who provide long term data storage solutions in a sector that was worth 65 billion in 2020 and is growing every year due to the need for improved data storage solutions?
No value?
Exactly, no value. This is about holding crypto, not using it. Lotex is simply a facilitator that gladly accepts your money without a whole load of detail what it does with it: according to their own website: "[Lotex] is a new age thought. Especially this is a private blockchain that works within the blockchain. It is just empowering the Internet of Things (IoT)." Whoopee Doo. Ask Terry Smith if this is for him...
Airweave website; "Arweave is a new type of storage that backs data with sustainable and perpetual endowments, allowing users and developers to truly store data forever – for the very first time.". Really? Do I not need a piece of this.
If these are intrinsic value to you, go for it.
It is always the defence of crypto freaks that somehow this is THE future; that they are buying into something that is more than Dutch tulips. True that blockchain technology (which is what these companies are, I think, promoting) has had some good press, albeit my understanding is the banks who were interested have backed off somewhat. I don't see the relation between that and the price of bitcoin.
Ask yourself this: if there is intrinsic value to bitcoin, why does the price fluctuate so much? At the very least, you must accept that there is a frothy overload of interest that is quick to dissipate; if there is intrinsic value, what is it pricewise? And, yes, there are other investments with little or no intrinsic value - I have held gold physically and in ETF for may years as hedge against inflation and dollar collapse - but it has form in the sense of an historical pricing and as a recognised store of value since Roman times.