A report published by the British bank Standard Chartered indicates the company’s analysts are bullish about the crypto asset ethereum. The bank’s analysts think that bitcoin could reach $175K and said “structurally, we ‘value’ ethereum at $26,000-$35,000.”
British Bank Publishes ‘Ethereum Investor Guide,’ Formulates the Economic Case for Ethereum’
The British multinational banking and financial services giant Standard Chartered has published a report on the two leading cryptocurrencies. The report, called “Ethereum Investor Guide”, was actually written by Geoff Kendrick and Christopher Graham. The report goes into various factors including “structural considerations” like what the “economic case is for Ethereum.”
The Standard Chartered research report notes that “ETH and BTC share many characteristics,” but the Ethereum blockchain has things like smart contracts, decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs), decentralized finance (defi), non-fungible token (NFT) assets, and initial coin offerings (ICOs). Despite the myriad of applicable use cases Ethereum offers, the bank does say there could be a greater risk than it would be with bitcoin (BTC).
“While potential returns may be greater for ETH than for BTC, risks are also higher,” the three Standard Chartered researchers said.
Standard Chartered: Proof-of-Stake Shift Has ‘Obvious Environmental Advantages’
Standard Chartered’s report emphasized the upcoming Ethereum 2.0 transition. Standard Chartered researchers stated that the shift has obvious environmental benefits. “As it removes the need for excessive computer power to be used in ‘mining.’ The switch from [proof-of-work (PoW)] to [proof-of-stake (PoS)] is expected to be gradually phased in during H1 2022,” Kendrick, Graham, and Chan said.
Standard Chartered also discussed subjects like “sharding,” “from EVM to eWASM,” and the overall supply of ether. It also notes that scaling Ethereum and the ETH 2.0 rollout is a difficult task. “ETH 2.0 is complex,” the writers insist. “[And] is a complete upgrade to an already complicated platform. The complexity is compounded by the fact that both ETH 1.0 and ETH 2.0 are running in parallel for a protracted period,” the researchers state.
The Standard Chartered Report also considers the “regulatory environment” and the “competitive environment.” It mentions decentralized applications that compete with Ethereum in the defi, NFTs and decentralized apps (dapps) worlds. The report states that “separate ecosystems exist already and may continue to challenge Ethereum” in niche areas. The bank’s report concluded that regulatory concerns regarding Ethereum will be different from those related to Bitcoin.
What do you think about the Standard Chartered report about Ethereum and other competing networks? Please comment below to let us know your thoughts on this topic.
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Bitcoin, blockchains, Christopher Graham, competitive landscape, DAOs, DeFi, Ethereum, Ethereum Network, Geoff Kendrick, ICOs, Melissa Chan, NFTs, regulatory landscape, Researchers, Smart Contracts, Standard Chartered, Standard Chartered ETH, Standard Chartered ether, Standard Chartered Ethereum, Standard Chartered report
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