4.8 • 689 Ratings
🗓️ 19 July 2020
⏱️ 29 minutes
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Bitcoin days destroyed (BDD) was first introduced as a concept back in 2011. At the time, it had only been two years since the creation of the world’s first cryptocurrency, bitcoin. Individuals were already beginning to innovate ways to measure on-chain transaction activity and value.
This episode is sponsored by Bitstamp and Crypto.com.
As the first cryptocurrency metric to be created, BDD was quickly followed by a plethora of other unique metrics including unspent transaction output (UTXO), market value to realized value (MVRV) and spent output profit ratio (SOPR). Despite the sophistication of cryptocurrency data and analysis since 2011, BDD remains a fundamental metric to understanding and valuing bitcoin.
See also: Coin Days Destroyed: Giving Meaning to Transaction Volumes
“[BDD] is a metric that reflects the collective action of long-term [BTC] holders,” said CoinDesk senior research analyst Galen Moore on a special podcast episode about the metric. “What’s the psychology of the long-term holder? You can see that in a collective way [through BDD] in a way I don’t think is possible in other asset categories.”
Moore interviewed Coin Metrics’ Lucas Nuzzi on Tuesday, July 7, to learn more about the use cases for and limitations against BDD. In a follow-up discussion about the interview recorded Thursday, July 9, Moore noted no other financial asset enables traders and investors to see the activity of long-term asset holders as transparently as bitcoin.
To this, CoinDesk research intern Duy Nguyen noted the motivations behind why long-term holders are moving funds at any given time is still largely a guessing game that requires further off-chain analysis beyond the scope of BDD.
For more information about BDD, you can watch the 30-minute webinar featuring an exclusive presentation on the metric by Nuzzi on the CoinDesk Research Hub.
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0:00.0 | Any metric that you look at is riding high when the price is up and is down when the price is low. |
0:07.0 | At what point does the price move fast enough in an upward direction that you start seeing headlines in the Wall Street Journal and on CNBC, |
0:15.0 | and you start seeing more investors saying, okay, I've got to get in on this before it becomes too expensive to buy in. |
0:26.3 | What I'm getting at is a metric like CBDD would incorporate that kind of price fluctuation and maybe normalized for it a little bit in a way that looking at the native Bitcoin units by |
0:30.5 | itself might not capture. |
0:33.1 | Today's episode is sponsored by BitStamp and Crypto.com. |
0:37.1 | Hello, everyone. Welcome to the first behind the scenes discussion of the CoinDest Research |
0:41.8 | Bitcoin Fundamentals webinar. On Tuesday, senior research analyst Gaylon Moore spoke with Coin |
0:47.3 | Metrics Lucas Nutsi live on Zoom about the metric Bitcoin Days Destroyed. On the podcast, |
0:53.4 | we've got Gaylon Moore himself, |
0:55.2 | senior research analyst at CoinDask, |
0:57.5 | and we've also got our summer research intern, |
1:00.0 | Zui Wynn, to join us for the show. |
1:02.6 | Thanks for being on the show, guys. |
1:04.6 | So starting off, Gaylan, |
1:06.1 | what were your main takeaways from the discussion on Tuesday? |
1:09.9 | One of the main points that we got to is the |
1:12.9 | importance of Bitcoin Days destroyed in the sense of it being a fundamental that is really |
1:19.4 | getting to the heart of how the Bitcoin network works. Whether you think of Bitcoin Days |
1:25.3 | destroyed as being a sort of a metric to be used in a |
1:28.6 | kind of a Bitcoin price prediction or not, it is one of these things that we're understanding |
1:34.4 | it gives you just a better holistic understanding of what's happening on the Bitcoin |
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