Ether Becomes Deflationary for First Time Since the Merge: Coinbase
Ether (ETH) reached a “post-Merge milestone” this week as it became deflationary for the first time since the Ethereum blockchain switched to proof-of-stake (PoS), Coinbase (COIN) said in a report Thursday.
It became deflationary as more ether was burned verifying transactions than was created in the same period, which led to a -0.13% reduction in supply over the last week, equivalent to about 4,000 tokens, the note said.
The rate of new ether creation has fallen nearly 90% since the Merge, the note added.
CoinDesk Special Coverage: The Ethereum Merge
The Merge was the first of five upgrades planned for the Ethereum blockchain, and involved the transition to a more energy-efficient PoS consensus mechanism.
Some argued that a drop in the ether supply should have resulted in higher prices (assuming demand stays constant), however, Coinbase notes that the price of the cryptocurrency has fallen about 4% in the last week.
An ethereum-based token project called XEN triggered ether’s deflationary burn rate when it fueled a large spike in network traffic last weekend, the report said.
Read more: Morgan Stanley Says Crypto Ecosystem Is Becoming Less Decentralized