Ethereum has already sold 11.5 million ETH (was 7 million yesterday) sold at roughly $0.30 per ETH. So they've already raised $3.3 million, plus the whitepaper says they will additionally premine 9.9% of whatever that final amount is to be given to the founders and early angel investors. And there are 40 more days to go that this IPO premine will be open to investors.
(I wonder if they've done their legal requirements to comply with SEC regulations for non-qualified USA investors, could end up in legal trouble as
what happened to some in the Bitcoin community who sold shares to non-qualified USA investors)
Plus the annual debasement will be 26% of what ever the premine from the IPO ends up being.
As I wrote upthread, it is appears Ethereum is getting the interest of Peter Thiel. And the only way to have Turing-complete apps on the blockchain without viruses is to have certification of each app by a centralized authority. Thus looks like this is the direction it will morph to over time. It won't be truly decentralized, because the apps will need to be vetted by an authority, although the apps will run decentralized after vetting. We can clearly see the powers-that-be are taking control over Bitcoin (one pool has 50% of the mining hashrate) and now on Bitcoin 2.0 concepts.
Note Charles Hoskinson originally tried to recruit me to work on Bitcoin 2.0 altcoin, and when I declined he hooked up with Vitalik Buterin. Someone told me Charles 'left' Ethereum. Look what happened to the last company he was forced out of bytemaster's Protoshares/Bitshares.
https://coinmarketcap.com/So BitSharesX is in 7th place with a $20 million market cap after nearly a year of release.
Even the #3 coin (other than Bitcoin or Litecoin) is only at $50 million market cap. Thus even if Ethereum makes it to #3 within a year and if the IPO ends up being say $5 - $10 million (already at $3.3 million 1 day into the 42 day IPO), then the upside is only less than a 10 bagger in a year, unless somehow Ethereum surpasses Litecoin in that short time frame (not likely!). Also the actual release won't come until late 2014 or early 2015, so it will be 1.5 years before seeing that level.
Realistically it is looking that gains on Ethereum will be in the realm of less than 100% per annum. And there is a lot of technical risk of snafus and failure.
This doesn't appear to be a good risk versus reward investment.
Some other faster moving altcoin will come along in the interim time and take away the momentum of Ethereum.
But I could be wrong and it surpasses Litecoin quickly (but I still think that is not likely).
I agree and I guess the price will drop initially.
Look, what it all comes down to is this:
What is the best Coin Emission SchemeI put the following CES in a list, ranked from "fair" to "scam"
FAIR:
PoW: announce the new coin at least a few weeks in advance and generate the genesis block. delete the keys of that genesis block and PoW can start. Don't make it a "fastmine". <10% of the coins should be mined in the first month
æthereum approach: fix a certain bitcoin block (a few weeks in advance) and distribute the coins according to the bazlances at that block. This is an ideal scenario if you want your coin to be distributed in a way a lot of people will be able to use it from the start. This can have a very good effect on "adoption" of the coin
PoW + PoS: even with a small balance, it should be possible to mine for PoS. With peercoin, it's almost impossible. NXT solved that problem with "leased forging". If you want PoS, make it accesable to anyone!
PoB: Proof of Burn: nobody benefits from the bitcoins. They are gone. So if the new coin doesn't gain value, money is lost. Even with limited supply, it's not a ponzi, because there is noone benefitting (you need to announce it at least a month before launch off course)
***
"shady":
Fast PoW (+ PoS): if you announce your coin and let people mine it, even for a short period, it's a good thing. I can understand that if you want to have a 100% PoS coin. But the faster the PoW phase is, the more shady the coin is
premine (+ Pow or PoS): I can understand that the devs want some money to develop. That money is denominated in the new currency, so no garantee that their premine fund will someday be worth something. If the premine fund is managed transparently, it is justifiable
IPO with limited coin supply: you need to know in advance how much coins will be created. You can pay the devs BTC, but know that they will not have a risk, you risk loosing the BTC
***
SCAM:
IPO without knowing how much coins will be created: Ethereum
Centralized emission points, debt based: ripple
hyperfastmine / ninjamine: pump the altcoin when most of the coins are already generated (BCN, QUARK)
*****
I think a lot of issues just come down to FAIR EMISSION.