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Ethereum: Post-Merge opportunity costs have this to say about ETH

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On 15 September, Ethereum underwent the much-anticipated Merge. The feat demonstrated the exceptional skills of the devs contributing to Ethereumā€™s code and vision. However, despite the hype associated with the network, the question is – Did the outcome match its set goal(s)?

Opportunity costs intact

The Merge involved the most significant technical update since its inception, a move from proof-of-work (PoW) to proof-of-stake (PoS). Post-Merge, ETH issuance would fall to about 0.6 million per year, with a similar 2.7 million ETH burned.

Simply put, a net 2.1 million ETH burned per year, or -7% in yearly ETH supply.

Source: Ultrasound.money

The transition would not only help scale the network, but also bring down the energy consumption by 95%. Also, the merge spurred substantial changes for miners as well who could be out of business officially once the difficulty bomb hits.

Not just that, there would be a Ā significant decrease in ETH inflation, which means less ETH to go around. This is indeed the case now.

According to data from ultrasound.money, on Proof-of-Stake, ETH supply decreased to only 425 ETH issued (to date) ā€” a 98% decrease in issuance. Source: Ultrasound.money

In fact, according to the same platform, 21,117 new ETH would have been issued if Ethereum still operated on Proof-of-Work. The so-called opportunity costs, that is. Unfortunately, that wouldn’t be the case as executives have envisioned future plans for this new member.

Ethereumā€™s co-founder Vitalik Buterin recently commented about the king of altcoinā€™s next steps. The exec admitted that transactions could get slightly lower once Ethereum passes the Surge stage.

Looking beyond

Moving on to the price front, ETH dropped by 14.4% since the Merge while the strength of the U.S. dollar surged. At press time, ETH was down by >8% on the charts as it traded around the $1.3k-mark.

Source: CoinMarketCap

Meanwhile, the Merge brought on a shift in large address behavior. Herein, addresses holding 1k to 10k $ETH dropped 2.24% of their cumulative holdings. On the contrary, 100 to 1k addresses dropped around 1.41%.

In fact, the number two crypto lost 25% of its market value over the past week. This propelled many to believe that the event turned into what traders describe as a “buy the rumour, sell the news” trigger.

Having said that, perceptions could change as well. As the supply decreases and (if and when) ETH shows high demand, there could be a price hike. Even so, caution is to be maintained at all times.

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Shubham is a full-time journalist/ Crypto data analyst at AMBCrypto. A Master's graduate in Accounting and Finance, Shubham's writings mainly focus on the cryptocurrency sector with particular emphasis on market research studies and communications for >2 years. Also, a die-hard Chelsea fan #KTBFFH.
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