Don't Let the Cult of Price Hold Crypto Back
Cryptocurrency is too often viewed through the narrow lens of price. The dominant narrative surrounding Bitcoin, Ethereum, and the broader crypto market has become fixated on one idea: numbers go up. Did Bitcoin break $100,000? Did Ethereum double in a month? Is this altcoin going to the moon?
Financial media, X pundits, and even crypto advocates routinely reduce an entire technological revolution to a speculative race to ever-higher prices. But this is like evaluating Apple or Nvidia solely by their stock movements while ignoring the iPhone or the GPUs powering AI infrastructure. It's a superficial way of thinking — and in crypto, it's also dangerous.
In traditional markets, value is ultimately grounded in usage. The more products a company sells, the more revenue it generates. The more users it retains, the stronger its network effect. Apple isn't a $3 trillion company just because its stock price went up; it's because over a billion people use its ecosystem daily. Nvidia didn't become a Wall Street darling by sheer momentum; it built the most essential chips of the AI age. Stock price follows product-market fit. In crypto, this principle is often inverted — price comes first, and everything else becomes secondary or optional.Nowhere is this philosophy more deeply ingrained than in what might be called Saylorism — the ideology promoted by MicroStrategy's Michael Saylor, the loudest evangelist for Bitcoin-as-collateral. Under this worldview, the core utility of Bitcoin isn't transacting, building, or innovating — it's simply holding. You buy Bitcoin, never sell, borrow against it, repeat. The usage is the hoarding.
Bitcoin is not a currency or platform under Saylorism — it's a speculative vault for value, designed to appreciate forever and justify more borrowing. In essence, every company becomes a leveraged Bitcoin fund, building its capital structure around a single bet: that the number always goes up.
This is a radical departure from the logic that underpins healthy businesses. Traditional firms grow by creating value for others, through products, services, and infrastructure. Under Saylorism, value is internalized, circular, and ultimately recursive: you buy more Bitcoin because it's going up, which makes it go up, which justifies buying more. It resembles a corporate Ponzi mindset, not in legal terms, but in structural dynamics, where external adoption matters less than internal leverage. The market doesn't need new users, it just needs existing holders to keep believing.
Compare that to Ethereum, the second-largest cryptocurrency by market cap, which has taken a different path. While Ethereum is also subject to the gravitational pull of price speculation, and no one would argue that 'number goes up' doesn't matter; its value proposition is fundamentally rooted in usage. ETH is not just a store of value; it is the fuel of an economy. It powers decentralized applications, settles billions in stablecoin transactions, tokenizes real-world assets, mints NFTs, facilitates decentralized finance, and supports governance. ETH has demand because the network has demand. The more people use Ethereum, the more ETH is needed. And the more ETH is burned through transaction fees, the more supply becomes constrained. Price here reflects activity, not just belief.
This distinction is profound. Ethereum's growth is tied to its functionality, to what it enables for users and developers. It resembles a traditional business more than a vault. It's like Amazon in the early 2000s: difficult to value by conventional metrics but serving a growing ecosystem.
The difference between these two models–Bitcoin as gold and Ethereum as infrastructure–has sparked endless debate over whether they're even in competition. Some argue they're entirely different species: Bitcoin is a monetary metal; Ethereum is a decentralized world computer, perhaps likened to digital oil.
It's fair to ask: what's ultimately more valuable, the gold you keep or the dollar you spend? Bitcoin's value depends on people holding it. Ethereum's value depends on people using it. Both are succeeding, but the paths are not the same.
If cryptocurrency is to evolve beyond its speculative adolescence, it must shift away from price obsession and toward utility obsession. This means asking harder questions: What is this protocol used for? Who depends on it? What problem does it solve? Valuation must come from participation, not just price action. A blockchain that delivers real-world utility for finance, identity, coordination, or computation deserves appreciation. But it must earn it through adoption, not ideology.
What if, instead of competing, Bitcoin and Ethereum found common ground and worked together?
That's where the opportunity emerges: Ethereum serves as the most robust gateway for Bitcoin holders looking to access the broader world of decentralized finance. No network rivals Ethereum in terms of DeFi's depth and maturity. By converting BTC into Ethereum-compatible assets, holders can engage in a dynamic ecosystem of lending, staking, and yield generation, turning dormant Bitcoin into active, value-producing capital. Platforms like Aave, Lido, Ethena, ether.fi, and Maker enable BTC to participate in ways that static holding simply can't.
The outcome?
Mutual benefit: Ethereum attracts more liquidity, while Bitcoin gains much-needed utility. It's a powerful synergy that amplifies the strengths of both networks.
Cryptocurrency is not just a dumb financial asset It's programmable money, digital property, frictionless transactions, decentralized coordination, and trustless finance. It's a reimagining of the internet's economic layer. But its long-term success depends on moving past the dopamine of daily price charts. Because in the end, the most valuable technologies aren't the ones with the flashiest tickers; they're the ones that get used.
And usage, not hoarding, is what builds lasting value.Sign in to access your portfolio
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Insider
35 minutes ago
- Business Insider
Silent Giant TSMC Returns to the Peak of its Powers as the AI Boom Continues
AI and U.S. growth stocks have rebounded to record highs after their slump in February and March, rewarding those who bought the dip, especially in the IT and AI sectors. At the heart of this resurgence is Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (TSM), better known as simply 'TSMC', the silent powerhouse behind the AI boom. The stock is within grasp of yet another historic high around the $225 mark. Confident Investing Starts Here: TSMC produces the chips that drive everything from Nvidia's GPUs to Apple's iPhones, and it's now experiencing accelerated growth fueled by surging AI demand, global factory expansion, and massive capital investment. Despite its strong rebound and concerns about exuberant valuations, TSMC still appears attractively priced. Given how sharply TSM has bounced back, the stock could become the ultimate Tech play, with its best days still ahead. AI's Engine Room: TSMC's Chip Dominance Many tech giants are currently riding the AI wave, but when it comes to TSMC, it's more appropriate to say that the company is steering it. As the world's largest contract chipmaker, it produces the advanced processors that Nvidia, AMD (AMD), and Apple (AAPL) rely on to bring AI to life. In TSMC's latest earnings call in April, CEO C.C. Wei revealed that AI chip revenue, which tripled in 2024, is expected to double again this year. This is currently a major tailwind for TSMC, driving a 41.6% year-over-year revenue surge. Specifically, advanced 3nm and 5nm chips, critical for AI's heavy lifting, made up 73% of wafer sales. With cloud giants like Microsoft (MSFT) and Amazon (AMZN) building AI data centers at breakneck speed, the company's factories are running at full capacity, with no signs that demand is slowing down anytime soon. Going Global: TSMC's Strategic Power Move In the meantime, with AI entering the sphere of national security, TSMC has been incentivized to not keep its magic in Taiwan. It's spreading its wings to secure its AI dominance and sidestep geopolitical risks. The company is investing $165 billion in U.S. factories, with Arizona's first fab already fully booked by heavyweights like Nvidia and Qualcomm (QCOM). Here's how all these giants stack up on TipRanks' stock comparison tool: Moreover, in Europe, a new $10 billion plant in Dresden, Germany, and a chip design center in Munich are positioning TSMC to capture the continent's growing AI market. Beyond the motive of diversifying supply chain and hedging geopolitical risk, TSMC has managed to secure long-term, high-value contracts with global tech titans through these moves, as they, in turn, can make such commitments with notably less risk involved. Wei emphasized that these expansions will cement TSMC's leadership for decades, even as U.S. trade policies loom as a potential headwind. By building closer to its customers, TSMC ensures its chips remain the go-to for AI innovation. Betting Big: Capex Fuels the AI Future TSMC is doubling down on AI with an aggressive capital expenditure plan of $38–$42 billion for this year, up from $29.8 billion in 2024. Over 70% of that spending is allocated to next-generation 3nm and 2nm chip production, set to launch later this year, which will deliver the performance needed to stay well ahead in the AI race. Realistically, few competitors are even operating at TSMC's level. This investment reflects a broader trend, as tech giants invest billions in AI infrastructure. TSMC sits at the center of this transformation, converting that capital into the cutting-edge chips driving AI's next evolution. As CEO C.C. Wei put it, 'AI demand is insatiable,' and TSMC is positioning itself to meet it, powering years of potential growth. TSMC Valuation Defies Expectations Here's where the investment case gets compelling: despite TSMC's explosive growth, the stock remains attractively valued. With Wall Street projecting a 33% jump in EPS this year, TSMC trades at a forward P/E of just 22. For a cyclical chipmaker, that might seem high, but TSMC isn't a typical semiconductor company. The AI boom is a multi-year tailwind, driving sustained top and bottom-line growth. With over 60% global foundry market share and ongoing global expansion, TSMC's scale and strategic positioning make that valuation look like a bargain—even if EPS growth slows in future years. Is TSMC Stock a Buy, Sell, or Hold? Wall Street appears strongly bullish on TSMC's prospects, further emboldening the stock's recent rebound alongside most other high-growth tech stocks. TSMC stock carries a Strong Buy consensus rating, with seven analysts currently bullish and one neutral. TSMC's average stock price target of $223 indicates a modest 5% upside potential over the coming twelve months, amid a broader long-term trend that is expected to deliver amiable returns for several years to come. The AI Bet You Can't Overlook Calling TSMC just a chipmaker misses the bigger picture—it's the backbone of the AI era. With AI demand soaring, global fabs in development, and billions in capex reinforcing its dominance, TSMC's growth story is far from over. Trading at a forward P/E of ~26, the stock offers a rare opportunity to own a high-growth industry leader at a reasonable valuation. Yes, geopolitical risks remain, but TSMC's strategic positioning keeps it ahead of the curve. For investors looking to ride the AI wave, TSM may be one of the shrewdest long-term bets available.


Tom's Guide
an hour ago
- Tom's Guide
Galaxy Z Fold 7 expectations: Samsung is setting a high bar for its next foldable with all this pre-launch hype
Samsung really wants you to know its working on some new foldable phones. And it's also hoping that will get you excited about the upcoming Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Galaxy Z Flip 7, even if the rumors about those devices haven't yet gotten your heart racing. It started a week ago when Samsung posted a teaser that promised "cutting-edge performance and seamless AI integration optimized for the foldable format." "It's what users have come to expect from Galaxy Ultra," Samsung said of its upcoming foldabe, raising the specter of a second, higher-end Galaxy Z Fold model. (That's likely not the case, though, as we'll get to in a bit.) Then, while Apple was wrapping up its WWDC keynote a few days ago, Samsung decided to remind us once more that new foldables were on the way. And this version was going to be even more slender than previous models. "The newest Galaxy Z series is the thinnest, lightest and most advanced foldable yet — meticulously crafted and built to last," Samsung's latest teaser claimed. "The Ultra experience is ready to unfold." Two consecutive weeks of foldable-touting posts sets the stage for a big announcement, which rumors claim will be happening in July. All that's required now is for Samsung to produce new foldable phones that live up to this hype. Unfortunately, if you go by the rumors that have emerged around either the Galaxy Z Fold 7 or Galaxy Z Flip 7, that's going to be tough for Samsung to do. There's always the possibility for surprises, of course, but the chatter around the next round of foldable phones from Samsung covers a lot of the improvements you'd expect — new chipset, larger displays and other enhancements here and there — but nothing that seems to herald a new era for foldable devices. In fact, the Galaxy Z Flip 7 sounds like a pretty run-of-the-mill upgrade. It's set to feature a Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset, though models released outside of the U.S. may turn to Exynos chips instead. Both the main screen and cover display are tipped to be bigger, and Samsung could use a bigger battery in this year's model. But the camera setup on this foldable flip phone isn't likely to change. The Galaxy Z Fold 7 sounds a bit more promising, in that it's expected to adopt the 200MP main camera already found on the Galaxy S25 Ultra and Galaxy S25 Edge. That upgrade will go along with larger screens plus the Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset, according to rumors. But based on its teasers, Samsung seems to want us to focus on the thinness of its phones, the Galaxy Z Fold model in particular. The current Galaxy Z Fold 6 is 5.6mm thin when unfolded — just a little bit more slender than the ultra-thin Galaxy S25 Edge. But rumors suggest the Galaxy Z Fold 7 could shrink further, with a reported thinness between 3.9mm and 4.5mm. A phone that thin would certainly impress. But I'm not sure it moves the needle for people who've yet to consider a foldable device over a phone with a more conventional design. If you've been holding out on giving foldable phones a try, does it really matter to you that Samsung is shaving a millimeter-and-a-half off the thickness of its flagship device? I'm guessing the answer is no. Rather, I think the thing that will convince more people that foldable phones are the wave of the future will be when they offer capabilities that take advantage of that flexible design. Multitasking that makes the most of that enlarged interior display — reportedly 8 inches on the Galaxy Z Fold 7! — seems like a prime area for Samsung to make its mark. To be fair, current Samsung foldables do offer some multitasking features, even if more apps could be optimized for foldable displays. And in its June 4 Galaxy Z Fold teaser, Samsung mentions "seamless AI integration optimized for the foldable format," which would seem to imply that Galaxy AI features geared toward its foldable phones could be in the works. If so, then that would certainly lend some muscle to that "Ultra experience" the phone maker keeps touting. But it's also noteworthy that amid all of Samsung's talking points about its foldables — They're thin! They're light! They're versatile! — the affordability of the Z Fold and Z Flip aren't being mentioned at all. And in light of price hikes last year that upped the cost of the Galaxy Z Fold 6 and Galaxy Z Flip 6 by $100, that's a little worrisome. I understand that foldables are going to cost more than conventional phones. And though the Z Fold 6 is very expensive at $1,899, the best foldable phones from OnePlus and Google aren't exactly inexpensive in their own right, either. But at some point, Samsung's going to have to shift its focus away from making everything thinner and lighter to making a foldable phone that more people can afford. There had been talk of that happening with an FE edition of the Galaxy Z Flip, which would be a smart move on Samsung's part, given that two of the three Motorola Razr (2025) models cost less than the $1,099 Z Flip 6. But the rumor mill has been quiet on the prospect of a cheaper Z Flip model lately, making me wonder if it's going to be a part of the next Galaxy Unpacked event that brings us new foldables. I keep circling back to Samsung's use of the word "Ultra" in its recent foldable teasers and wondering whether the upcoming models will live up to that branding. Certainly, a 200MP main camera on the Z Fold 7 would put camera capabilities on a par with the Ultra and a thinner design would be nothing to sneeze at. But I think it's going to take more than the standard upgrades you'd expect to see to live up to the hype Samsung's looking to generate. That could be anything from record-setting battery life — remember, most foldables struggle to last long on a charge — or features that are unique to the Fold and Flip. If they're Galaxy AI exclusives, all the better. Deliver something like that, and I'll tip my hat to Samsung at the next Unpacked. Roll out the same-old same old — and at the same price — and I won't be the only one wondering what all the pre-launch fuss was about.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Coming Soon: SeeClickFix Odessa City App
ODESSA, Texas (KMID/KPEJ)- The City of Odessa is launching a new app called SeeClickFix, where Odessans will now be able to report potholes, animal attacks, illegal dumping, and much more. All you have to do is take a picture of the problem, write a short description, and send it to them. 'It assigns you a ticket number. You could follow that wherever it goes,' Craig Stoker at-large said. 'So, if it comes in and it needs to go to solid waste trash needs to be picked up. You are going to be able to follow that ticket. You will see that it went to solid waste. You are going to see that they sent out a truck. You are going to see that it got picked up.' There will be multiple types of issues that people can report and let the city know of. Stoker said they would try to fix the problems as soon as possible. 'I want to be able to use this tool as both the recording tool and the accountability tool,' Stoker said. 'Why did it take X amount of time to get this done hey you great job you got that done in an hour and a half.' The City of Midland has been using the app for quite some time and said it's been a success. 'Looking at Midland. Looking at the way they SeeClickFix. Looking at the way they use their back end of reporting to make their departments better, to improve their customer service,' Stoker said. 'Those are the things that I've been watching and learning from and really wanting to use over here.' Those who don't want to download the app can still go to the City's website or call them. You can talk to the new Chatbot where you can ask any questions or it will direct you to where you need to go. Both Android users and Apple users can download the app. Also, city officials are hoping to have the app launched by the end of the month. We will keep you updated. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.