Over the years, many crypto industry observers have pointed to the same potential problem with Bitcoin. It’s nothing to do with transactions per section, anonymous value transfers, or miner centralisation either.
No, a much easier problem to address relates to the way exchanges list Bitcoin. Some crypto asset proponents believe that the seemingly high price of a single Bitcoin is putting investors off.Would a Notional Bitcoin Price Drop Spur Greater Investment?
Although few will admit it, the chance to turn a small investment into a massive profit is what attracted many folks to Bitcoin. The fact that the price of the world’s first viable digital currency went from just fractions of a cent to almost $20,000 in its first decade of existence is certainly hard to overlook.Using Satoshis Might Make BTC Investment More Appealing
Reasoning that 2020 should be the year that exchanges and other crypto industry service providers ditch pricing whole Bitcoin and start referring to how many satoshis a given amount of fiat currency is worth is Twitter user BTC Sessions (@BTCsessions).
In the following tweet, they call for Bitcoin on ramps to display prices in the smallest unit of a . This, for them, would prevent “sticker shock” amongst newcomers to the industry who might otherwise be attracted to “‘cheap’ shitcoins simply because they felt they missed the boat” on Bitcoin.I'd love to see A MASSIVE push for every Bitcoin on ramp to implement sats as a unit this year. In a mania this will greatly reduce sticker shock and save many noobs from buying "cheap" shitcoins simply because they felt like they missed the boat. Tell your exchange: SATS FTW! — BTC Sessions 😎 (@BTCsessions)
Related Reading: Pre-Halving Rally: Bitcoin Just Bounced From Stock-to-Flow Baseline
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