Four Altcoins Are Soaring As Bitcoin, Ethereum and Majority of Crypto Markets Retreat

Several under-the-radar crypto assets are exploding in price despite a lingering downtrend across the markets.

Patriotic ConstitutionDAO has seen its native token PEOPLE leap by 61% this week. The project initially arose to crowdfund the purchase of a rare original copy of the United States Constitution but was ultimately unsuccessful during a Sotheby’s auction in November.

The PEOPLE altcoin has seen unexpected strength despite the project’s founders offering to refund the $47 million raised, minus gas fees. At time of writing the token is priced at $0.13.

Also shining this week is Decentralized Social (DESO), which aims to solve the scalability needs of social media platforms. The project has previously received funding from billionaire investor and crypto advocate Chamath Palihapitiya’s Social Capital and just this week was listed on the Coinbase Pro trading platform.

DESO has blasted higher, gaining 61% to trade at $153.54 as news of the Coinbase announcement spread.

Climate-neutral developer platform Near (NEAR) is up an impressive 30% this week, including a 10% rise today to $10.18.

The project’s website says that Near provides scaling solutions to help increase Web 3.0 adoption.

“The Creator Economy requires robust infrastructure including a set of intuitive developer tools, and an engaged, decentralized community.”

The final notable altcoin on the move this week is the cloud computing project FLUX (FLUX), which offers a comprehensive suite of developer-friendly tools for Web 3.0 and decentralized applications (DApps).

Native token FLUX can be used to buy resources, collateralize nodes, and fuel network transactions.

FLUX recently got a boost when popular crypto marketplace Binance announced the token would be available on its trading platform.

The creator of the Zelcore digital wallet and formerly known as Zelcash, FLUX has jumped by 37% over the past week to $1.78.

In contrast to these trending altcoins, leading crypto Bitcoin (BTC) has retraced by 7% over the same time frame to $47,311.

Second-ranked Ethereum (ETH) has also declined by 14% to $3,708, at time of writing.

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Altcoin Project Backed by Billionaire Chamath Palihapitiya Explodes After Coinbase Pro Listing

An altcoin that has received support from billionaire investor Chamath Palihapitiya is surging after a surprise listing by top US crypto exchange Coinbase.

In a new blog post, Coinbase says that Decentralized Social (DESO) will start trading on Coinbase Pro once appropriate liquidity conditions are met.

The layer 1 blockchain project aims to provide scalability to social media applications for up to a billion users. Decentralized Social is open-source and stores all data on-chain.

Coinbase says of the native token DESO,

“DESO can be used to purchase ‘social tokens’ and NFTs [non-fungible tokens], and to create profiles and posts for Decentralized Social applications.”

The altcoin shot up as news of the Coinbase Pro listing spread. DESO is up over 38% on the day to $138.34. The 87th-ranked crypto had previously been trading in the $75 – $105 range over the past 30 days.

The token reached a quarterly high above $150 back in September after the project changed its name from BitClout and raised over $200 million in capita, including from venture capital firm Social Capital.

Social Capital CEO Chamath Palihapitiya mentioned DESO back in October as part of his basket of investments to hedge against inflation.

“I’m very concerned about medium-term inflation… I want to own three things: hypergrowth [firms]… cash-generative assets… and then I want to own non-correlated assets: Bitcoin, Solana, DESO, a lot of the DeFi [decentralized finance] protocols because it’s a great counter-intuitive hedge…”

According to the Decentralized Social website, the project seeks to empower creators to monetize their efforts.

“The DeSo core development team is relentlessly focused on using the power of blockchain to create as many new ways for creators to monetize as possible.

And because DeSo is an open platform, every new feature becomes instantly available to thousands of developers who will invent new products we’ve never seen before.”

Coinbase says the token will be available to trade paired with USD, EUR and USDT.

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Why Chamath Is Wrong About Inflation

While billionaire Chamath Palihapitiya has been an early, vocal proponent of Bitcoin for nearly a decade now, his grasp of Bitcoin’s ethos seems to be fraying. Setting aside his recent snafu with Bitcoin veteran and advocate Surfer Jim, Chamath doesn’t seem to understand principles of inflation, wealth inequality or their historical context.

When Lyndon B. Johnson enacted the Great Society programs of the ’60s to alleviate poverty and elevate the general well being of Americans, the world still operated on a gold standard. The government couldn’t print trillions seemingly out of thin air to finance its spending. Today’s world is a stark contrast.

Now, the government can create new money to finance expenditure, bail out corporations, and airdrop USD to people’s bank accounts. Such spending has doubled the USD money supply in the last decade, leading to warranted concerns about inflation. But listen to what Chamath says about inflation on a recent episode of “All In Podcast”:

“Inflation is a phenomenal way to decrease people’s richness… it makes rich people poorer… The one consistent way to redistribute wealth is inflation.”

Chamath is unequivocally wrong. Inflation is one of the biggest drivers of wealth inequality for two reasons: the Cantillon effect, and the debasement of savings for the 45 percent of Americans who don’t own financial assets.

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The Cantillon Effect, Inflation And Wealth Inequality

A litany of literature has been written by economists, Bitcoiners and even us on the Cantillon effect and how it pertains to inflation and wealth inequality. In a nutshell: When new money is created, it doesn’t affect all parts of the economic spectrum equally. Increasing the money supply doesn’t benefit the average person in the same way that it benefits wealthy people.

As Richard Cantillon theorized over three centuries ago, newly-created money first floods into the hands of those closest to the government, and eventually a few small droplets trickle down to the everyday layman. Isn’t this what we just saw twice? The Federal Reserve’s balance sheet increased by trillions. Airlines, hedge funds and corporations got hundreds of billions of dollars and we got… three checks over the course of a year totaling to $3,200?

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And who pays for these bailouts totaling 20 percent of the country’s GDP? The factory worker living paycheck to paycheck to put food on the table. The nurse putting away a few hundred bucks a month into her son’s college savings account. How? Money printing causes inflation, which debases people’s savings.

When inflation hits an economy, it first shows up in increased commodity and asset prices. Dave Portnoy isn’t wrong, stonks only go up, but it’s because there is an “infinite amount of cash in the Federal Reserve” that finds its way into financial assets. Weimar Germany’s hyperinflation was prefaced with a massive stock market bubble:

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Note the log scale on the left to denominate nominal prices in Deutsche marks.

Through all historical periods of inflation, assets inflate first, then consumer prices inflate and then, eventually (if ever), wages inflate. When assets inflate but wages stay stagnant, investing in markets becomes more inaccessible to everyday people, but the rich get richer as stocks rocket to the moon. When consumer prices go up but wages stay stagnant, the least wealthy suffer the most. The dollars they’ve saved up little by little buy them fewer goods and services.

Inflation isn’t a way to take from the rich and give to the poor, it’s quite the opposite. Inflation makes rich people richer through asset inflation, and makes poor people poorer through consumer price inflation.

So, What Actually Happened In The 1970s?

Bringing this back to the example Chamath initially brought up: the 1970s, aka, Stagflation.

Consumer price inflation spiked up to 20 percent annually in the ’70s for two reasons. First, geopolitical events related to the oil crisis caused a supply shock. Second, we abandoned the gold standard and established the fiat standard, which gave central banks around the world the ability to create unlimited amounts of money, causing inflation.

Inflation was high, and wealth inequality was relatively low, but the former didn’t cause the latter, and even if it did, it certainly wasn’t a good thing. The reason wealth inequality was low was because everybody was having a tough time. The ’70s had one of the highest rates of unemployment in recent history, and prices rose significantly while growth and wages stayed stagnant (stagnation + inflation = stagflation).

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To combat this, former chair of the Federal Reserve Paul Volcker raised interest rates to 20 percent at the end of the decade, sending the country into a recession. Equity prices went down as treasury yields rose, and most people who owned stocks suffered. And everyday folks, out of jobs with little in savings, suffered far more as their money had less value and purchasing power.

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Stagflation was a miserable time for most Americans. To imply that both wealthy and poor people suffering is good because they’re somewhat equal is preposterous. Perhaps Chamath knows all of this, and chooses to misinform his 1.4 million followers? Given Chamath’s exposure to both bitcoin and his heavy involvement in U.S. equities, both of which would benefit from inflation, this could make sense. Regardless of his motives, Chamath’s comments on inflation and wealth inequality are wrong. Inflation causes wealth inequality. Well… what now?

Bitcoin: A Fair, Open Monetary Network

Not to beat a dead horse, but Bitcoin fixes this. Bitcoin was purpose-built to solve the problems of central banking and fiat money.

Bitcoin is an open monetary network, and a monetary asset that nobody can control. The rules of the network promote free markets, monetary sovereignty and a financial system that works for everybody. Regardless of if you’re a whale with hundreds of bitcoin, or you’re just getting started with stacking sats, the same rules apply to you:

  1. 21,000,000 bitcoin fixed supply
  2. All transactions are broadcasted openly to the network
  3. All transactions are immutable and irreversible
  4. Mining difficulty adjusts every 2,016 blocks to ensure an average 10 minute block time
  5. Block reward is halved every 210,000 blocks to maintain supply schedule

Nobody can change these rules to suit their needs. Nobody can create more bitcoin and distribute it how they see fit. It’s uncensorable and unconfiscatable.

Because of these properties, millions of people are exiting the fiat monetary system that works for the wealthy, and entering a bitcoin-based monetary system. They store their wealth in bitcoin, because finite supply ensures that value only increases over time. They use it for payments because it’s Lightning fast, pseudonymous and permissionless. They use it as a unit of account because they believe it will be the next global reserve currency.

Yes, as Chamath says, bitcoin is a hedge against the current financial system and “schmuck insurance,” but it’s so much more than that. It’s an entirely new form of money, and nobody fully understands how meaningful it is for all of us.

Bitcoin severs the link between governments and the creation of money. Bitcoin can mitigate the impacts of the Cantillon effect.

Bitcoin presents the opportunity to reimagine the way we interact with and store value. Millions of Bitcoiners have started to live their lives on a Bitcoin standard. We’re building Ryze to help them optimize their finances for Bitcoin while helping their friends and family learn about and transition into a Bitcoin-native financial system.

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This is a guest post by Abhay Aluri. Opinions expressed are entirely their own and do not necessarily reflect those of BTC Inc or Bitcoin Magazine.

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Billionaire Chamath Palihapitiya Says Bitcoin Exposing Fragility of Traditional Financial Infrastructure

Venture capitalist and Social Capital CEO Chamath Palihapitiya says Bitcoin is sparking a revolution that exposes the vulnerabilities of the traditional financial system.

In a new interview with Bloomberg Markets and Finance, Palihapitiya says that as BTC rises to prominence, other portions of the global financial infrastructure will shift as well.

“Can I tell you something about Bitcoin that is so important? I think that Bitcoin is very important because it just shows the fragility of the traditional financial infrastructure. If you just look at the quantity and the size of the M2 money supply as an example, the real question we should be asking ourselves is, ‘Okay, if Bitcoin becomes a defacto world reserve currency that basically displaces gold, what replaces the US dollar?’

It’s not Bitcoin that replaces the US dollar. It is a stablecoin.

What does all of that mean? In less fancy language, there are companies around the world that are replacing one fixed US dollar with one digital token of the US dollar, and by simply making that small abstraction, they’re able to completely build financial rails that didn’t exist before.

On ramps and off-ramps, the trading, to asset management, to banking, to payments processing, there’s a revolution happening. It’s not felt as much in the United States because people don’t see it because the financial services infrastructure is so robust. But when you look at the developing world, and if you look at any market where there is any form of currency manipulation or currency instability, that’s the future.

Bitcoin is a canary in a coal mine for a completely virtual, largely anonymous – and we can debate whether that’s good or not – financial reality. I think that it’s a very important trend that’s worth understanding.”

Palihapitiya also touches on his price target for Bitcoin, joking that once the flagship cryptocurrency reaches his prediction, he is going to rename Goldman Sachs after himself.

“Friends of mine and I, we have a little group chat and we were just talking about random things for the summer in the hope that the pandemic eases, and one of my friends, Rob Goldberg, actually was the one that said ‘Champtons,’ and it kind of set off a light bulb… It’s very tongue and cheek. I did another one which said I think, ‘When Bitcoin gets to $100,000, I’m going to buy Goldman Sachs and rename it Chamathman Sachs.’ These are all jokes. This is part of my personality that some folks don’t get.”

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Bitcoin billionaire set to run for California governor

Early Bitcoin investor and industry proponent Chamath Palihapitiya has signaled a potential run for the position of California governor.

The CEO of venture capital firm Social Capital, Chamath Palihapitiya, appeared to announce his intentions in a Tweet on January 26. The post linked to his new website with a number of promises for the U.S. state including massive tax cuts, an increase for teacher’s salaries, the end of student loans, and a handout for new births.

Palihapitiya appears to be gearing up for the 2022 Gubernatorial race or potentially for a special election, though no specifics were provided beyond his intentions to get involved politically.

The billionaire businessman has also joined efforts to force a recall vote for the current California governor Gavin Newsom which would lead to a special election later in 2021 according to reports.

A growing number of Californians have been displeased with Newsom’s performance in the position, especially when it comes to inconsistent shutdowns and a slow-moving Covid-19 vaccine rollout.

The former Facebook executive Palihapitiya was an early investor in Bitcoin (he bought a million) and he says he wants to maintain the state’s status as a leading technology hub:

“Let’s make California the global centre of all tech & climate jobs by realigning our incentives rather than pushing them away,”

In an interview on January 7, he said that he sees Bitcoin as insurance against economic uncertainty and that its price could soar to $200,000 over the next five to ten years.

According to an April 2020 Forbes article, Palihapitiya bought Bitcoin back in 2013 when the price was around $80 per coin, and he claims that at one point he owned around 5% of the entire Bitcoin supply.

There have been a number of pro-crypto moves in U.S. politics since President Biden took office on January 20 which include the nomination of former member of Ripple’s board of advisors directors, Michael Barr, as the next Comptroller of the Currency. Additionally, the Biden administration has also picked crypto-knowledgeable Gary Gensler to head the Securities and Exchange Commission.

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