• shortwavesurfer
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    9 months ago

    What do you mean? I’ve been using Monero for over a year and in that time one Monero has always equaled one Monero. /s

    It’s only when you price it in fiat currency that the price changes.

      • shortwavesurfer
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        9 months ago

        True, i have never measured it against gold. Though my guess is that price action would be pretty muted since both are decently stable.

          • adminA
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            9 months ago

            Monero is actually the least volatile crypto asset that is not specifically designed to be pegged to fiat.

          • shortwavesurfer
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            9 months ago

            I did not say stable. I said decently stable. Since Monero is actually used as money and changes hands often, the price fluctuations do exist, but they are less than they might otherwise be. Monero took a big shock recently during the Binance de-listing and dropped 30% which lasted for all of about a week before it was back to a decent equilibrium and only a month to recover most of that loss. It has recovered 20% of the original drop, even though there are fewer people using it. Because it removed some speculation from the market. More people over time are realizing that Bitcoin is not the promise they understood it to be and are leaving for Monero.

            • Shyfer@ttrpg.network
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              9 months ago

              How does Monero avoid the problem of Bitcoin? Of just being used for investment and not currency?

              • shortwavesurfer
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                9 months ago

                Low fees, a focus on privacy, not calling itself “digital gold”

                • Shyfer@ttrpg.network
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                  9 months ago

                  But is it still deflationary? I may be wrong, but I feel like any currency that is deflationary over inflationary encourages hoarding instead of spending.

                  • shortwavesurfer
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                    9 months ago

                    Just because it’s deflationary doesn’t mean that it’s not spent primarily because you still need electricity, food, gas, and other things. So you are forced to spend it whether you want to or not. Monero itself is not technically deflationary as 0.6 new coins are released every 2 minutes forever. What you end up with is that Inflation asymptotically approaches zero until an equilibrium is reached where new coins are created at the same rate that coins are destroyed through negligence, etc. Right now, Monero has an inflation rate of about 0.85% and falling all the time.