Cold storage coins into the hot furnace of the marketplace...Generally speaking, it is "good" for Bitcoin if the current issuance, now 10.9 million, is spread across many users and investors. It can be considered "bad" if a large percentage of bitcoins remain locked up by the earliest adopters. This is not a black-and-white situation as saving/investing/hoarding is good for a currency, but so is widespread spending and usage. Too many coins locked up means an artificially high exchange rate prevails, which can be tanked at any time by a sudden disinvestment resulting in instability, disruption of product pricing, and bad press.
So, the question for which I invite comment, and hopefully quantitative analysis:
"Is the 2013 peak (or plateau) bringing many coins out of cold storage which have been untouched for two years, and further, are better charts possible showing granularity in variously aged coins being transacted."
Days Destroyed (DD)Blockchain transactional analysis for movement of aged coins is done by examining each input address:
Days Destroyed = Num Coins * Age In Days
So a bitcoin spent after 100 days in a wallet has the same DD as 100 BTC spent after 1 day in a wallet.
In 2011 the rise to the temporary peak at $31 clearly brought a lot of early cold storage coins into general circulation, as evidenced in the all-time chart of Bitcoin days destroyed filtered by minimum of one year:
http://blockchain.info/charts/bitcoin-days-destroyed-min-year?showDataPoints=false×pan=all&show_header=true&daysAverageString=7&scale=0&address=The situation in 2013 shows a similar rise, but smaller, although for a more sustained period:
http://blockchain.info/charts/bitcoin-days-destroyed-min-year?timespan=1year&showDataPoints=false&daysAverageString=7&show_header=true&scale=0&address=Scaled Days Destroyed (SDD) The assumption here is that it is an improvement by using a power factor on Bitcoin days destroyed giving much greater weight to the movement of aged coins instead of the linear relationship inherent in DD.
Scaled Days Destroyed = Num Coins * (Age In Days)
Power FactorThe most useful power factor for this analysis could be somewhere between 1 and 2. Assuming it is 2, a single bitcoin spent after 10 days in a wallet would have 100 times the SDD as one bitcoin spent after one day in a wallet, or 100-fold increase in weighting per 10-fold increase in age.
What effect does this have on daily or weekly charts? Coins moved after a few years would be very significant.
Could a SDD violin chart (similar to the one linked below) be the ultimate quick visual reference for the movement of aged coins?
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/m.1633247What do you think?