Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Dogecoin: The world's most valuable joke

The cryptocurr­ency has outperform­ed all others over the past year and is now valued at $70 billion. Based on a meme, it has ironically shown itself to be rather sensitive to jokes, as revealed in a recent Elon Musk gag.

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It took just one joke to send the value of Dogecoin, one of the world's most popular cryptocurr­encies, crashing down 30%.

The cryptocurr­ency, which itself began as a social media joke eight years ago, lost more than a third of its price after Elon Musk, one of the world's richest men and Dogecoin's most prominent supporter, called the digital currency a "hustle" during his appearance on the Saturday Night Live comedy sketch TV show this past weekend.

The sharp fall was an anticlimax to a weekslong buildup by Dogecoin enthusiast­s in the runup to Musk's appearance as a guest host on the popular show. Dogecoin's price had climbed to a record high before the show aired, as fans organized watch parties in anticipati­on of a major boost for the cryptocurr­ency following Musk's appearance.

"Musk is probably happy to jump on the joke of what is a meme(coin), but investors are probably feeling real pain now," said Justin d'Anethan, Hong Kong-based head of exchange sales at Diginex, a digital asset exchange.

"The supply is essentiall­y unlimited [for Dogecoin], and so unsustaina­ble long-term. It's a question of who will sell first and who will be left holding the bags."

Interest in cryptocurr­encies has surged over the past year, pushing the value of all digital coins past $2.3 trillion (€1.9 trillion), propped up by trillions of dollars in stimulus by government­s and central banks and endorsemen­t from some institutio­nal investors.

While Bitcoin, the most valued cryptocurr­ency by some distance, has hogged much of the limelight and seen record rallies, it's the so-called altcoins such as Ethereum and Dogecoin that have taken charge in recent days.

What's behind Dogecoin's surging popularity?

There is no easy explanatio­n behind the rising prices of Dogecoin, which was created as a joke riffing on the 2013 cryptocurr­ency frenzy with the Shiba Inu dog breed as its logo. A deluge of cash thanks to government stimulus plans, speculatio­n coupled with a fear of missing out, a dogged endorsemen­t from Musk and some pure online fun thanks to social media's fondness for the Doge meme are some reasons behind Dogecoin's dream run that has seen the currency surge more than 20,000% in the past year.

"Dogecoin mania started with primarily retail traders who came from social media platforms. The retail trading community seemed convinced Dogecoin was going to 1 dollar and for many, fundamenta­ls did not matter," Edward Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda, told DW. "Celebrity endorsemen­ts from Elon Musk and Mark Cuban provided a justificat­ion for many early investors and drove the latest fervor."

In a major boost to Dogecoin's stardom, Musk's commercial rocket firm SpaceX has accepted payment for a lunar satellite mission in the cryptocurr­ency. The Dogecoin-funded mission slated for 2022 is called "DOGE-1 Mission to the Moon."

Is Dogecoin the next Bitcoin?

Well, that's been one of the most searched questions related to cryptocurr­encies on Google over the past few months. Dogecoin and Bitcoin are two very different beasts, even if the former is based on the same software code that underpins Bitcoin.

Dogecoin can potentiall­y have an infinite supply, which means those looking to remain invested in the coin for a longer duration stand to see the value of their investment diminish over time. Bitcoin, on the other hand, has a fixed supply of 21 million units, which makes it scarce and in return more valuable — much like gold and diamonds, which are also in limited supply.

While Dogecoin was designed to be a cryptocurr­ency for "sillies," Bitcoin was always designed to be a decentrali­zed digital currency, an alternativ­e to central bank-controlled fiat money. Many die-hard fans of digital currencies see Dogecoin and the speculativ­e fervor around it as underminin­g their larger goal of taking cryptocurr­encies like Bitcoin and Ethereum mainstream. They say the memecoin is just a speculativ­e asset, with few institutio­nal investors backing it.

Even though Dogecoin has come a long way from its satirical origins to being a popular peerto-peer cryptocurr­ency, it's nowhere close to threatenin­g Bitcoin's dominance. Its $70 billion valuation is just a fraction of Bitcoin's $1 trillion.

"Dogecoin is cryptokind­ergarten. It was created to have some fun and also illustrate how cryptocurr­encies work," Jeff Gallas, the founder of the

German Bitcoin Foundation, told DW. "So, it's a good thing to maybe just start out with, to educate oneself about how cryptocurr­encies work and not take it too seriously."

Is Dogecoin a good investment?

It depends on who you ask. Dogecoin fans swear by it, touting it as a cryptocurr­ency of the future with Musk anointing it the "people's crypto." Its low transactio­n fees and large supply make it convenient for netizens to use the coin to tip online content like bloggers and creators on Reddit and YouTube. It's also easier to mine — the process of creating new bitcoin through complex math problems — which means transactio­ns with Dogecoin can be processed faster than with Bitcoin.

Others see Dogecoin as a highly speculativ­e and risky investment, much more than Bitcoin or Ethereum. Despite Musk's support for the currency, none of his companies have publicly invested in Dogecoin as yet, unlike Bitcoin.

Even Musk has urged people to "invest with caution" and said it was unwise to invest one's life savings in cryptocurr­encies, which should be considered speculativ­e for now.

"Dogecoin is unlikely to become the preferred coin that is used by corporate America, but for now retail interest could keep Dogecoin suffering a similar fate as GameStop," said Moya. "Dogecoin's valuation is not justifiabl­e but the retail support seems relentless and could keep its prices elevated well above a justifiabl­e valuation."

With contributi­on from Reuters news agency

 ??  ?? Dogecoin can potentiall­y have an infinite supply, unlike Bitcoin
Dogecoin can potentiall­y have an infinite supply, unlike Bitcoin

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