Fai mai le Fa'amaoni Le mea ua tatou mafaufau i ai: Atunu'u & Faletupe Tutotonu o le a fa'atau le BTC

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Fai mai le Fa'amaoni Le mea ua tatou mafaufau i ai: Atunu'u & Faletupe Tutotonu o le a fa'atau le BTC

Surprising the world, Fidelity predicts what Bitcoin’s game theory implies. It’s as Satoshi Nakamoto said, “It might make sense just to get some in case it catches on.” That’s the exact same conclusion that Fidelity reaches in its “Research Round-Up: 2021 Trends And Their Potential Future Impact” report. Take into account that Fidelity is a multinational financial services corporation, it doesn’t get more mainstream than this.

I agree with @Fidelity, of course, but still astonishing to read this on Bitcoin adoption game theory in such a mainstream financial report: pic.twitter.com/7zRO9rEele

— Alex Gladstein (@gladstein) January 13, 2022

What did Fidelity say about Bitcoin adoption at the nation-states and central bank level? 

Na latou fa'ailoa manino mai:

“We also think there is very high stakes game theory at play here, whereby if bitcoin fa'ateleina le vaetamaina, o atunu'u e fa'amautu nisi bitcoin today will be better off competitively than their peers. Therefore, even if other countries do not believe in the investment thesis or adoption of bitcoin, they will be forced to acquire some as a form of insurance. In other words, a small cost can be paid today as a hedge compared to a potentially much larger cost years in the future.” 

In other words, It might make sense just to get some in case it catches on. And, as Stacy Herbert said, “First mover advantage goes to El Salvador”. At least if we’re talking out in the open, because other countries might be accumulating Bitcoin on the down-low. For example, Venezuela seized a lot of ASICs from private miners. Chances are those are active in a warehouse somewhere. And, of course, there are rumors that the USA is already mining.

Fa'amaoni o se tasi o pule sili o aseta i le lalolagi

Latou te vaʻai i mea e le malamalama ID-10ts

First mover advantage goes to

Game over for fiat, game on for #bitcoin

pic.twitter.com/I0Jlp8baVY

— Stacy Herbert (@stacyherbert) January 13, 2022

I soo se tulaga, o le a le faaiuga a le Faamaoni?

“We therefore wouldn’t be surprised to see other sovereign nation states acquire bitcoin i le 2022 ma atonu e vaʻai foi i se faletupe tutotonu e faia se faʻatauga."

Afai e faia e na tagata taaalo i fafo, atonu o le a tupu ai se tuuga e leai se isi. O se tuuga lea o le a matua lamatia ai le le auai. 

Speaking About Bitcoin Mining…

Fidelity’s report summarized 2021, it goes through most of the major stories that NewsBTC has covered ad nauseam. The company doesn’t try to figure out why did China ban Bitcoin mining, but it highlights how fast the hashrate recovered. 

"O le toe faʻaleleia o le fua o le hash i lenei tausaga na matua ofoofogia lava ma o se tasi matou te manatu o loʻo faʻaalia ai le tele o mataupu o le a taua e teu i le mafaufau mo le 2022 ma tua atu."

The Fidelity report also highlighted how well the network responded. “This has now been tested and bitcoin’s network performed perfectly.”

BTC price chart for 01/17/2022 on Eightcap | Source: BTC/USD on TradingView.com What Does Fidelity Say About The Ecosystem In General?

The report wasn’t exclusively about Bitcoin, they also identified the biggest trends in the wide crypto sphere.

“The biggest non-Bitcoin themes put on display this past year included the massive issuance of stablecoins, the maturation of decentralized finance, and the early days of non-fungible tokens.”

Ma e uiga i na faiga, na valoia e Fidelity:

"O le tuputupu aʻe o fesoʻotaʻiga i le va o poloka poloka poloka"

"Kamupani fintech faʻaleaganuʻu o loʻo galulue faʻatasi poʻo le fausiaina o gafatia e fegalegaleai ai ma DeFi protocols"

"O le vaveao o faʻasalalauga algorithmic stablecoins ua amata aloaia." Tali atu i le "tuputupu aʻe o le manaʻoga mo sili atu faʻatulafonoina, stablecoins tutotonu."

"E ui e le o iloa le aoga umi o nei NFTs, o le aʻafiaga o le faʻateleina o aia tatau meatotino faʻatekinolosi mo faatufugaga, musika, ma anotusi e foliga mai e aoga i nisi tulaga."

I se tulaga lautele, e manatu Fidelity o tupe faʻafaigaluega i aseta numera o le a faʻatupulaia pea:

“Allocating to digital assets has become far more normalized over the past two years for all investors. The Fidelity Digital Assets 2021 Institutional Investor Survey found that 71% of U.S. and European institutional investors surveyed intend to allocate to digital assets in the future. This number has grown across each individual region of the survey for the past three years, and we expect 2022 to show another year of higher current and future asset allocations to digital assets amongst institutions.” 

Ae ui i lea, e tatau ona tupu se mea e faʻamalosia ai le faʻalauteleina o le faʻavaeina o faʻalapotopotoga. "O le ki i le faʻatagaina o tagata tuʻufaʻatasiga masani e faʻaauau pea ona sasaa atu tupe i totonu o le faʻaogaina o aseta faakomepiuta e faʻataʻamilo i le manino ma le faʻaogaina."

Is 2022 the year of regulatory clarity? What will happen first, institutional adoption of cryptocurrencies or nation-states adoption of Bitcoin? What central bank will earn first-mover advantage? Burning questions for the year ahead.

Featured Image by Damir Spanic on Unsplash | Charts by TradingView

Punavai autu: NewsBTC