Abstract

The cryptocurrency market surpassed the barrier of $100 billion market capitalization in June 2017, after months of steady growth. Despite its increasing relevance in the financial world, a comprehensive analysis of the whole system is still lacking, as most studies have focused exclusively on the behaviour of one (Bitcoin) or few cryptocurrencies. Here, we consider the history of the entire market and analyse the behaviour of 1469 cryptocurrencies introduced between April 2013 and May 2017. We reveal that, while new cryptocurrencies appear and disappear continuously and their market capitalization is increasing (super-)exponentially, several statistical properties of the market have been stable for years. These include the number of active cryptocurrencies, market share distribution and the turnover of cryptocurrencies. Adopting an ecological perspective, we show that the so-called neutral model of evolution is able to reproduce a number of key empirical observations, despite its simplicity and the assumption of no selective advantage of one cryptocurrency over another. Our results shed light on the properties of the cryptocurrency market and establish a first formal link between ecological modelling and the study of this growing system. We anticipate they will spark further research in this direction.

Highlights

  • Bitcoin is a digital asset designed to work as a medium of exchange [1,2]

  • Our analysis focuses on the market share of the different cryptocurrencies and is based on the whole history of the cryptocurrency market between 28 April 2013 and 13 May 2017

  • We have shown that the total market capitalization has entered a phase of exponential growth

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Summary

Introduction

Bitcoin is a digital asset designed to work as a medium of exchange [1,2]. Users can send and receive native tokens, the ‘bitcoins’, while collectively validating the transactions in a decentralized and transparent way. The underlying technology is based on a public ledger, or blockchain, shared between. Participants and a reward mechanism in terms of Bitcoins as an incentive for users to run the transaction 2 network. It relies on cryptography to secure the transactions and to control the creation of additional units of the currency, the name ‘cryptocurrency’ [3,4]

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