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ETH’s Supply Change After the Merge

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Though ETH issuance has slowed drastically, it’s still an inflationary asset.

Ethereum’s Merge has done a lot to shift the issuance dynamics of ETH, fulfilling most of what was estimated by analysts and the Ethereum Foundation prior to the transition.

However, there are still some nuances that need clarification as to if and when ETH can become deflationary, and its supply would cease to expand.

Let’s dive in.

Ethereum: Not Quite Deflationary

According to ultrasound.money, the amount of ETH in circulation has risen by over 5,990 ETH since the Merge on September 15th, at the time of writing (September 24th). At current prices, that’s roughly $8 million worth of ETH that has entered circulation.

That’s not to say the Merge didn’t make a difference, however. Issuance is still far lower than the projections under a continued proof of work model would have expected: over 112K more ETH by September 24th.

It’s also lower far lower than Bitcoin’s current issuance rate of 6.25 BTC every 10 minutes.

How ETH Issuance Works

Ultimately, ETH’s issuance comes down to two variables: block subsidy, and burn rate.

The block subsidy represents all newly generated ETH with each block, which is produced roughly once every 12 seconds as of the merge. The size of the subsidy depends on the amount of ETH being staked on the network. At the current staking rate – roughly 14 million ETH – about 1700 ETH are being rewarded to stakers every day.

Burn rate refers to the amount of ETH being burned through gas fees. Naturally, the burn rate rises alongside fees, which rises when Ethereum is experiencing high transaction volume.

The burning mechanism was introduced during the London hard fork last year and has led to some net-deflationary periods for Ethereum already. Meanwhile, this month’s merge reduced ETH’s daily issuance from 14,600 ETH to just 1600 ETH – a nearly 90% decline.

In order for ETH to be deflationary, the number of tokens being generated through block subsidy must be less than that being burned by the network. In other words, ETH becomes more deflationary the fewer people stake, and the more people transact.  At current staking levels, the base transaction fee must be at least 15 Gwei (0.000000015 ETH) for ETH to be deflationary.

As of September 20th, this is not the case. Average transaction fees. Average transaction fees are just 11 Gwei, an amount that would result in 412,000 ETH being burned per year. Meanwhile, current staking levels would cause 603,000 ETH to be generated per year. That’s net annual inflation of 191,000 ETH – or 0.16% – every year.

Will ETH Ever Be Deflationary?

How this figure will change over time remains to be seen.

On one hand, inflation could be expected to rise as more people enter the staking arena. The Ethereum network currently provides roughly 4.5% APR to stakers, denominated in ETH. Meanwhile, staking services like Binance.US are currently offering up to 6% in staking rewards.

Given staking’s relative risk-reward profile compared to other forms of yield (ex. lending), this could prove very attractive for future ETH bulls.

Staking also appears to be a relatively untapped market on Ethereum. Other top crypto networks have roughly 50% of their token supply being staked, versus Ethereum’s 14%.

On the other hand, those who expect Ethereum to evolve into a high-volume network for decentralized commerce may expect transaction fees to rise – increasing the burn rate and pushing ETH issuance into deflationary territory. Arthur Hayes – former CEO of BitMEX – has theorized that this could create a bullish feedback loop for the asset, reflexively incentivizing buying, usage, and deflation of ETH.

However, as Hayes noted during an interview this month, there may be limits to how high transaction fees can rise before users get fed up.

“Let’s say the deflation gets so severe that it becomes so expensive that nobody uses it… well, guess what’s going to happen? They’re going to change the inflation rate,” he said.

For this reason, Hayes doesn’t believe that Ethereum can compete with Bitcoin as a monetary network. In his view, ETH’s additional role as gas interferes with its ability to be money, whereas Bitcoin’s value “cannot be conflated with the actual utility of other stuff.”

Paulo Arduino from Bitfinex offered a similar argument leading up to the Merge. He claimed that Ethereum’s narrative “keeps shifting” and has too many other priorities to compete with Bitcoin as money.

Ethereum’s “ultrasound money” narrative is a spinoff of Bitcoin’s “sound money” meme due to its absolutely fixed supply and immunity to monetary debasement.

Reports /TrainViral/

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Crypto

Bitcoin’s Recovery – the Downturn Is Over

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The market is currently in a news-driven environment where the prices of cryptocurrencies have been determined by news agenda rather than fundamentals.

Bitfinex analysts have warned crypto investors to be cautious as bitcoin’s (BTC) recovery over the weekend is not a sign that its correction is over; the asset could witness more bloodshed in the near term.

In the latest Bitfinex Alpha report, experts deemed the market’s reaction this week critical, especially as supply alleviated over the weekend could return when traditional markets open.

“No Man’s Land”

Since Saturday, bitcoin has risen almost 10% from $57,600 to $63,000, closing last week in the green. The asset has surged above the 125-day range low of $60,200, which it broke through earlier this month after news of the German government’s massive BTC selling hit the market.

Market sentiment began to improve after reports that wallets linked to the German government were almost empty. However, the positive sentiment may not be sustained for long as the BTC the German authorities moved to trading desks and exchanges are yet to be sold.

While the supply from Germany appears to have been factored into bitcoin’s market price, Bitfinex analysts believe the end of selling pressure depends on how the involved trading desks execute their trades in the coming days.

Although the shift in sentiment underscores the market’s capacity to integrate new information and adjust expectations quickly, analysts think the market’s reaction over the first two trading days of the week cannot be overlooked for two reasons.

First, the low support level in the $60,200 range has now become a potential resistance line. Second, trading patterns over the past three months suggest that weekends are usually favorable for markets, especially on Saturdays when supply pressure seems to subside.

“We are now in no man’s land until we get clear resolution above or below this level,” the analysts said.

A News-Driven Environment

Besides the potential resistance level and three-month weekend trading pattern, the market is currently in a news-driven environment, where the prices of cryptocurrencies have been determined by news agendas rather than fundamentals.

Since selling pressure concerns are not yet completely obsolete due to upcoming Mt Gox creditor distributions, Bitfinex analysts expect such headlines to continue to have some impact on price movements. As such, the analysts urged investors to exercise caution in their trading strategies.

Reports /Trainviral/

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Bitcoin ETFs Saw $300M in Daily Net Inflows

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BlackRock’s IBIT led with $117.25 million in inflows on July 15, also being the most traded Bitcoin ETF.

The US spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded a daily net inflow of $301 million on July 15th. This extended their winning streak to seven consecutive days amidst a broader market recovery.

None of the ETFs recorded outflows for the day.

Bitcoin ETFs Rake in $16.11B in Net Inflows Since Jan

According to the data compiled by SoSoValue, BlackRock’s IBIT, the top spot Bitcoin ETF by net asset value, recorded the largest net inflows of the day at $117.25 million. IBIT was also the most actively traded Bitcoin ETF on Monday, with a volume of $1.24 billion. Ark Invest and 21Shares’ ARKB came in close behind with net inflows of $117.19 million.

Fidelity’s FBTC experienced net inflows of $36.15 million on Monday, while Bitwise’s BITB saw $15.24 million in inflows. VanEck’s HODL, Invesco and Galaxy Digital’s BTCO, and Franklin Templeton’s EZBC funds also recorded net inflows. Meanwhile, Grayscale’s GBTC and other ETFs, such as Valkyrie’s BRRR, WisdomTree’s BTCW, and Hashdex’s DEFI, registered no flows for the day.

A total of $2.26 billion was traded on Monday. The trading volume for these ETFs was less than in March when it exceeded $8 billion on some days. Meanwhile, these funds have collectively attracted $16.11 billion in net inflow since their January launch.

What’s Next For Bitcoin?

Earlier this month, bitcoin’s price decline was mainly due to fears of massive selling pressure from Mt. Gox and the German government’s BTC sales.

But the assassination attempt on pro-crypto former US President and presumptive Republican candidate Donald Trump at Saturday’s rally seemed to spark a recovery in the world’s largest digital asset, and experts are bullish on the asset’s price trajectory going forward. Bitcoin surged more than 9% over the past week and was currently trading slightly below $64,000.

Veteran trader Peter Brandt discussed bitcoin’s price outlook, suggesting a potential major rally. He referred to a pattern he terms “Hump->Slump->Bump->Dump->Pump” and highlighted that the July 5 double top attempt was a bear trap, confirmed by the July 13 close. He sees a likely continued upward trend but warned that a close below $56,000 would negate this bullish view.

“Bitcoin $BTC could be unfolding its often-repeated Hump…Slump…Bump…Dump…Pump chart construction. Jul 5 attempt at the double top was a bear trap, confirmed by Jul 13 close. Most likely scenario now is that bears are trapped. Close below $56k negates this interpretation”

Reports /Trainviral/

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LI.FI DeFi Platform Exploited, Over $8M Lost

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PeckShield alert reveals LI.FI’s protocol vulnerability is similar to a March 2022 attack, with the same bug recurring.

The decentralized finance (DeFi) platform LI.FI protocol has suffered an exploit amounting to over $8 million.

Cyvers Alerts reported detecting suspicious transactions within the LI.FI cross-chain transaction aggregator.

LI.FI Issues Warning After $8 Million Exploit

LI.FI confirmed the breach in a statement on July 16 via X: “Please do not interact with any http://LI.FI powered applications for now! We’re investigating a potential exploit.” The team clarified that users who did not set infinite approval are not at risk, emphasizing that only those who manually set infinite approvals seem to be affected.

According to Cyvers Alerts, more than $8 million in user funds have been stolen, with the majority being stablecoins. According to on-chain data, the hacker’s wallet holds 1,715 Ether (ETH) valued at $5.8 million and USDC, USDT, and DAI stablecoins.

Cyvers Alerts advised users to revoke relevant authorizations immediately, noting that the attacker is actively converting USDC and USDT into ETH.

Crypto security firm Decurity provided insights into the exploit, stating that it involves the LI.FI bridge. “The root cause is a possibility of an arbitrary call with user-controlled data via depositToGasZipERC20() in GasZipFacet, which was deployed 5 days ago,” Decurity explained on X.

“In general, the risks behind routers, cross-chain swaps, etc. are about token approvals. Raw native assets like (unwrapped) ETH are safe from these kinds of hacks b/c they don’t have approvals as an option. Most users & wallets also no longer do “infinite approvals” which gives a smart contract total control on removing any amount of their tokens. It’s important to understand which tokens you’re approving to which contracts.

This dashboard looks for all transactions of a user that intersects Lifi. Not all of these transactions indicate risk- but you can see how, broadly, integrations & layers of tech (like how Metamask bridge uses Lifi on BSC) can complicate how users do or don’t put their assets at risk. Revoke Cash is the most well known approval manager app.

But it’s also good security practice to simply rotate your address. New addresses start with 0 approvals, so starting fresh by moving your tokens to a fresh address is another good security practice.” – commented Carlos Mercado, Data Scientist at Flipside Crypto.

Recent Exploit Mirrors March 2022 Attack

Further analysis by PeckShield alert revealed that the vulnerability is similar to a previous attack on LI.FI’s protocol that occurred on March 20, 2022. That incident saw a bad actor exploit LI.FI’s smart contract, specifically the swapping feature, before bridging.

The attacker manipulated the system to call token contracts directly within their contract’s context, making users who had given infinite approval vulnerable. This exploit resulted in the theft of approximately 205 ETH from 29 wallets, affecting tokens such as USDC, MATIC, RPL, GNO, USDT, MVI, AUDIO, AAVE, JRT, and DAI.

“The bug is basically the same. Are we learning anything from the past lesson(s)?” PeckShield Alert said in a July 16 X post.

Following the 2022 incident, LI.FI disabled all swap methods in its smart contract and worked on developing a fix to prevent future vulnerabilities. However, the recurrence of a similar exploit raises concerns about the platform’s security measures and whether adequate steps were taken to address the vulnerabilities identified in the previous breach.

LI.FI is a liquidity aggregation protocol that allows users to trade across various blockchains, venues, and bridges.

Reports /Trainviral/

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