Analysis: Around 70% of Bitcoins Unspent for Six Months or More

By November 24, 2014Bitcoin Entertainment
Click here to view original web page at www.coindesk.com

As many as 70% of all bitcoins in circulation have not moved in at least six months, according to data provided by Reddit user John Ratcliff.

Ratcliff, a principal engineer at NVIDIA who in his spare time uses 3D tools to visualize blockchain analytics, published the new charts to provide the community with a better idea of how and when bitcoins have moved in recent months

An analysis of the charts by cryptocurrency author and enthusiast Tim Swanson indicates that many bitcoins were bought during the late-2013 bubble, which peaked roughly a year ago, and are still lying dormant – presumably while their owners await a hike in price.

Swanson has also pointed out a "sobering" trend: although the number of merchants accepting bitcoin has increased fourfold this year, blockchain activity is not seeing a corresponding increase.

Bubble buyers holding on to their coins

Swanson explains that bitcoin movement correlates with a rapid increase in market prices, namely in April 2013 and November 2013. The substantial price drop following the 2013 bubble caused a reduction in blockchain movement and a majority of bitcoins are simply inactive.

Swanson bitcoin distribution by ageSwanson bitcoin distribution by age

Swanson finds the lack of movement in bitcoins bought at the top of the market particularly intriguing:

"What is especially interesting is to see the 'overhang' or rather the 'underwater' coins that are moving from the three months to the six- to 12-month band. What this effectively shows is that owners of those [bitcoins] purchased them during the bubble of November-December 2013 and are still willing to wait and hold onto these coins until the price rebounds."

Swanson distribution by age 2Swanson distribution by age 2

Swanson predicts that lack of upward movement in prices will eventually force the owners of these coins to sell them sometime in the spring of 2015.

Monthly liquidity is still hovering around the 10% mark and Swanson argues that Blockchain's transaction volume chart is no longer valid due to increased advertisement spam, mixing, mining rewards and a range of other factors.

The true cost of bitcoin security

The problem with such low volumes is that the sheer cost of maintaining the network amounts to 3,600 bitcoins every day, which effectively pays for security.

Swanson argues that the ratio of mined and processed coins, which is close to 1:2, means that a "massive security overkill" is still taking place – a situation that is analogous to "every other mall patron ... effectively being guarded by a mall cop".

Stressing that network transaction fees would have to increase by several orders of magnitude to replace the current mining incentive approach, Swanson concluded that holding or hoarding coins is understandable, but also problematic for a modern currency.

Miners currently have to spend the bulk of freshly mined coins within weeks in order to sustain their operations, hence they inject thousands of new coins on the market each day.

Merchants battling for limited coins

Another conclusion, Swanson says, is that the increase in the number of merchants willing to accept bitcoin has not translated to increased use of the digital currency on the part of consumers.

"Despite the near quadrupling of merchants that now accept bitcoin as payments (this past year increased from ~20k in January to ~76k through September), on-chain activity has not seen a corresponding increase by consumers," he said. "They are all effectively fighting for the same thin slice of liquid coins, a segment which empirically has not grown."

Swanson bitcoin value distributionSwanson bitcoin value distribution

Swanson concluded that payment processors collectively process 5,000-6,000 BTC on any given day, with the caveat that some additional activity could be taking place off-blockchain in trusted third parties.

In May, Swanson penned a CoinDesk feature, analysing blockchain trends and elaborating on why such analyses can be daunting (and inaccurate due to external factors that must be compensated for).

In the feature, he also stated that very little on-chain growth can be witnessed, as most of the growth is coming from 'trust-me silos' and in many cases trades were the result of security measures rather than commercial activity.

Correction: A previous version of this article contained an error in the source of the data charts. This has now been corrected

Charts via John Ratcliff

Data analysisPricesTim Swanson

Ratcliff, a principal engineer at NVIDIA who in his spare time uses 3D tools to visualize blockchain analytics,  published the new charts  to provide the community with a better idea of how and when bitcoins have moved in recent months

An analysis of the charts by cryptocurrency author and enthusiast Tim Swanson […]

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