The BTC Halving's Grave Warning

Bitcoin’s 4th Halving in the books, with the event programmatically slashing the network’s inflationary BTC block reward by 50% to 3.125 BTC per block.

Despite concerns that this Halving’s emissions reduction would result in a drop to hashrate, leading to lower levels of economic security – Runes and their profound impact appear to have pushed off this concern.

Bitcoin miners derive revenues from two components of the block reward: inflationary BTC emissions and transaction fees. The emission component of their income was halved on Friday, yet net transaction fees surged as onchain participants began minting and trading this latest generation of fungible tokens on Bitcoin.

On April 20, transaction fees comprised 74% of the total block reward, allowing miners to earn a greater amount of BTC than pre-Halving despite the sudden drop in inflation.

Source: Bitbo

The uptick in transaction fees could be sustainable in the long run, with some proclaiming that it marks the beginning of a new epoch for Bitcoin, but there remains good cause to take these statements with a healthy dose of skepticism.

The average transaction fee on the Bitcoin Network exploded to $127 in the immediate aftermath of the Runes launch but has since plummeted to $27 and continues to rapidly trend downwards towards normalized levels.

While Runes generated over 1,000 BTC in fees during the first 24 hours post-launch, the next two days of transaction activity produced a comparatively meager 328 BTC, evidence that hype has already begun to wane and a signal that Runes might not be the immediate solution to miner revenue problems.

Source: Dune Analytics

Runes fanatics are hopeful that an impending wave of centralized exchange listings will rekindle excitement for their bags, yet it is undeniable that momentum is fading in the immediate aftermath.

Even in the event of a Runes resurgence that increases transaction activity on Bitcoin, it is important to remember the fundamentals (or lack thereof) behind these tokens. Memecoins enjoyed a good run during the first quarter of 2024, but history has shown time and time again that all purely speculative crypto fads fade; the Runes speculation saga will end no differently.

Laser-eyed Bitcoiners have long held their proof-of-work consensus mechanism and 21M issuance hard cap in high regard as two of the aspects that imbue BTC with its value, but in the likely scenario that Runes fail to foster sustainable transaction revenues, network participants could be forced to reassess the sustainability of these features.

Feeling feisty today - here are 2 unpopular opinions:

- The 21m BTC cap will be removed and/or Bitcoin will become a PoS network

- The Bitcoin chain will be sunset and BTC the asset will survive as an ERC20 on Ethereum

These things may happen within the next 10-20 years

— sassal.eth/acc 🦇🔊 (@sassal0x) November 29, 2023

The Bitcoin Network's hashrate has remained relatively stable post-Halving, decreasing by less than 4% since the event, and as long as markets remain driven by risk-on sentiment, rising BTC price and robust onchain speculation will support miner revenues.

Until there is a clear consensus that Bitcoin’s current emissions schedule is inadequate, there will be little motivation to enact changes that might compromise BTC’s core values or its established monetary premium.

While the Bitcoin community has historically been staunchly opposed to change, neglecting to address future concerns could leave the blockchain in an uncomfortable situation should fears about the network’s security come to fruition.

Mathematically, Bitcoin cannot afford its current level of security without something driving transaction fees.

Any future fall off in speculation would not only decimate Bitcoin’s onchain activity, it would likely take a toll on BTC price, further decreasing the dollar value of the chain’s security budget and prompting the community to make the drastic changes that it has been resistant to make amid a moment of chaos.

Runes' early traction has sparked hope, but unless a lasting shift can come to the network that drives up transaction fees, the network will need to seriously consider the likelihood that uncomfortable changes will need to be made to ensure security going forward.

Bitcoin has reigned as the King of Crypto for over 15 years, but this reign isn't hard-coded.

Source
Disclaimer: The content above is only the author's opinion which does not represent any position of Followin, and is not intended as, and shall not be understood or construed as, investment advice from Followin.
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