Bearish on bitcoin? These charts might change your mind about cryptos

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Cryptos have had a rough year. After peaking in January with a market cap of $820 billion, the value of the entire cryptocurrency universe has plunged to $430 billion, according to CoinMarketCap.com. This while the Dow Jones Industrial AverageDJIA, -0.23%  and S&P 500 index SPX, -0.26% despite some wild swings of their own, hover near where they started the year.

Billionaire Bridge buddies Warren Buffett BRK.A, -0.64%  and Bill Gates piled on the bearish bandwagon over the past few days, with the latter saying he’d short bitcoinBTCUSD, -2.26%  if he could.

Then again, the Microsoft MSFT, -0.68%  founder allegedly had this not-so-prescient nugget to say about the internet in 1994: “I see little commercial potential for the internet for the next 10 years.”

Chris McCann of venture-capital firm Greylock Partners, along with many unflappable crypto enthusiasts, have long likened digital currency’s potential—and the ignorance surrounding it—to the early days of the World Wide Web.

In other words, the gold rush, to the faithful, is just getting started. And McCann recently offered a chart-heavy look on Medium at where bitcoin and the rest of the crypto universe currently stand in the grand scheme of things.

“Comparisons between cryptocurrencies and the growth of the internet are invariably drawn (including cryptocurrencies’ Netscape moment),” he wrote. “However, I wanted to test this comparison and see exactly how far along we are.”

So he did, with this one, in particular, capturing his broader point:

“You can see we’re actually tracking quite closely with the early days of the internet,” McCann wrote. “If you think cryptocurrencies is going to follow a similar trajectory as the internet, we look like we’re in about year 1994 compared with the internet.”

From there, McCann zoomed into the 1991-1995 period for the internet and compared it with the 2014-2017 era for cryptos, highlighting the growth of websites versus the growth of tokens receiving funding. Again, similar lines are drawn:

Just for good measure, he then compared the number of internet companies receiving funding back then with the number of crypto firms in recent years:

“Even though we’ve seen a huge increase for number of users of cryptocurrencies, tokens, and DApps—we are still in year 1994 if we compare the trajectory to the growth of the internet,” McCann explained, acknowledging in his post that skeptics might see his deep dive as a pointless endeavor.

“If you view the core use-cases of cryptocurrencies as a new asset class then I wouldn’t necessarily expect cryptocurrencies to follow the same trajectory as the internet,” he said. “If you view the core use-cases of cryptocurrencies as an application platform for…the decentralized internet, then the growth of users & DApps would be comparable to the growth of internet users & website growth.”

“Comparisons between cryptocurrencies and the growth of the internet are invariably drawn (including cryptocurrencies’ Netscape moment),” he wrote. “However, I wanted to test this comparison and see exactly how far along we are.”

So he did, with this one, in particular, capturing his broader point:

“You can see we’re actually tracking quite closely with the early days of the internet,” McCann wrote. “If you think cryptocurrencies is going to follow a similar trajectory as the internet, we look like we’re in about year 1994 compared with the internet.”

From there, McCann zoomed into the 1991-1995 period for the internet and compared it with the 2014-2017 era for cryptos, highlighting the growth of websites versus the growth of tokens receiving funding. Again, similar lines are drawn:

Just for good measure, he then compared the number of internet companies receiving funding back then with the number of crypto firms in recent years:

“Even though we’ve seen a huge increase for number of users of cryptocurrencies, tokens, and DApps—we are still in year 1994 if we compare the trajectory to the growth of the internet,” McCann explained, acknowledging in his post that skeptics might see his deep dive as a pointless endeavor.

“If you view the core use-cases of cryptocurrencies as a new asset class then I wouldn’t necessarily expect cryptocurrencies to follow the same trajectory as the internet,” he said. “If you view the core use-cases of cryptocurrencies as an application platform for…the decentralized internet, then the growth of users & DApps would be comparable to the growth of internet users & website growth.”

Either way, it is still too early to tell if crypto’s have an internet-esque future, but one things for certain, Gilfoyle would approve of McCann’s assessment.

Read more at: Market Watch

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