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Bitcoin [BTC]: CBOE and CME record lowest Bitcoin futures trading volume since inception

Bitcoin [btc]: cboe and cme record lowest bitcoin futures trading volume since inception

Bitcoin [BTC]: CBOE and CME record lowest Bitcoin futures trading volume since inception

The world of cryptocurrency has been expecting keenly the day when cryptocurrencies are more widely adopted by major investment firms. The recent comment of an SEC commissioner that a bitcoin ETF has a high probability of being approved was a step forward towards this development. However, in what could be a spanner in the works, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) and Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) have recently seen the lowest bitcoin futures volumes since they launched in December 2017.

According to research by Tradeblock, the data shows that bitcoin futures trading volume has fallen significantly after they peaked in the summer, since their launch in early 2018.  In the summer of 2018, the combined trading volumes across the top five US exchanges had reached near equivalence with the spot trading volumes.

Over the course of 2018, CBOE and CME both launched their competing products in the market. However, over the course of the entire year, CBOE lost significant market shares to CME. The chart below demonstrates the volume of trade over the months.

Bitcoin [btc]: cboe and cme record lowest bitcoin futures trading volume since inception

CME vs Cboe bitcoin Futures Notional Trading Volume Over Time | Source: TradeBlock

Upon careful observation of the chart, it can be observed that the initial volume trading was neck and neck between the institutions since the launch and it also reached a high point in July 2018, when the trading volume reached its summit at over $5 billion. However since then, there has been a consistent decline of volume which has caused spot volume trading to fall by almost 85%. Although the volume showed a little uptrend in November and December, the uptrend only came at the end of CME.

Bitcoin [btc]: cboe and cme record lowest bitcoin futures trading volume since inception

bitcoin Spot Notional Trading Volume Over Time | Source: TradeBlock

According to research, the constant decline in spot trading might be following parity with the exit of retail traders from the crypto space following the collapse of asset prices. The exit might be linked to the falling of search engine trends for bitcoin and cryptocurrency which were earlier used to gauge retail investor curiosity.

Interestingly, bitcoin trading had recently demonstrated the highest transaction per block and approached an all-time high of the mid-2017 price implosion.

The data above signifies that the futures trading activity has declined severely over the last one year since reaching a peak in the summer of 2018. The introduction of several new bitcoin platforms like Bakkt, Nasdaq and CoinFLEX, each looking to forward to launch future bitcoin products in the coming months, may improve this metric however.

The post Bitcoin [BTC]: CBOE and CME record lowest Bitcoin futures trading volume since inception appeared first on AMBCrypto.

Published at Sat, 09 Feb 2019 18:03:45 +0000

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The Ethereum Killer Is Ethereum 2.0: Vitalik Buterin’s Roadmap

VitalikTalk.jpg

Speaking on November 25 at BeyondBlock Taipei 2017, Ethereum inventor and co-founder Vitalik Buterin outlined his vision for Ethereum 2.0. He described major changes in Ethereum’s architecture that are likely to be implemented over the next few years to improve Ethereum in terms of privacy, safety (consensus safety and smart contract safety) and, of course, scalability, which was the main focus of Buterin’s talk.

Buterin doesn’t seem worried about competitors. “The Ethereum killer is Ethereum, the Ethereum of China is Ethereum, the Ethereum of Taiwan is Ethereum… 2.0,” he said.

The fact that Ethereum is booming seems to confirm Buterin’s optimism. ETH’s price has been relentlessly climbing, recently reaching almost $500, and Ethereum is handling more transactions than all other major blockchains combined.

Decentralization, scalability and security are among the important properties that blockchain systems should have, but there are conflicts. Off-chain solutions are useful, but limited. According to Buterin, it’s very easy to have two of these properties but very hard to have all three. However, Ethereum’s ambitious goal should be that of achieving all three at the same time. “We want to scale to thousands of transactions per second, on chain, without any supernodes,” reads one of Buterin’s slides.

Sharding

Sharding — dividing a blockchain network into several smaller component networks (called shards) capable of processing transactions in parallel — is considered to be a promising way to achieve high throughputs comparable to the thousands of transactions per second of traditional payment networks such as Visa and MasterCard.

“You can think of [sharding] as, in a fairly simple version, creating a blockchain where you have, let’s say, a hundred different universes, and each of these universes is a different account space,” said Buterin. “So you can have an account in some universe or you can have a contract in some universe and you can send a transaction in some universe, and if you send a transaction in some universe it only affects stuff in some universe.

“But these kind of 100 universes are not just separate blockchains; they are systems that are also interconnected with each other,” continued Buterin. “Particularly, they share consensus. So in order to break even one of them, you have to break the whole thing.”

Buterin went on to describe relatively easy and more sophisticated ways to implement sharding in the Ethereum blockchain, outlining a sharding roadmap that foresees, at least initially, the creation of new “universes” that don’t impact the main chain while permitting iterative experimentation, such as introducing higher levels of scalability, starting with “quadratic scalability as nodes validate certain shards and act as light clients for other shards.”

Privacy

Buterin noted that zero-knowledge proof (zk-Snarks) privacy technology equivalent to Zcash has been implemented in the recent “Byzantium” Ethereum upgrade, offering application developers new ways to implement tighter privacy. These new privacy tools will permit showing transactions to specific parties while hiding them from public view. Buterin went as far as saying that the privacy problem is now three quarters of the way to being solved.

Proof of Work vs. Proof of Stake

A major upgrade to Ethereum will be the introduction of Proof of Stake (PoS) in Casper which, according to Buterin, might be ready by next summer. With the first release of Casper, Ethereum will transition from pure Proof of Work (PoW) to hybrid PoW/PoS. “In this scheme, all of the proof-of-work mechanics will continue to exist, but additional proof-of-stake mechanics will be added,” noted Buterin.

The main reason why PoS is seen as a necessary development is, of course, the need to reduce the energy requirements of PoW blockchains like the current versions of Ethereum and bitcoin. A recent report claims that bitcoin mining consumes as much power in a year as 159 countries, which is clearly far too much, and Buterin admitted that today’s Ethereum isn’t any better than bitcoin in that respect.

Smart Contract Security

Smart contracts implemented with Turing-complete programming languages are arguably the main innovation introduced by Ethereum. While smart contracts are finding countless applications and moving lots of money, the security and safety of Ethereum smart contracts have been questioned. Buterin confirmed that Ethereum will eventually introduce formal verification for smart contracts and that a new Python-like smart-contract programming language — dubbed “Viper” — is being implemented to enable the development of safer Ethereum applications.

While Buterin hasn’t said anything that he has not said in previous talks and papers, his BeyondBlock talk served as a useful confirmation and summary of the ambitious Ethereum development roadmap.

Besides Buterin’s talk, all the talks given at BeyondBlock Taipei 2017 are included in the full video recordings of the morning session and the afternoon session.

The post The Ethereum Killer Is Ethereum 2.0: Vitalik Buterin’s Roadmap appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.