The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Cryptocurr­ency ethereum is flourishin­g but risks linger

- — Reuters

NEW YORK — Ethereum has outperform­ed major digital currency rivals this year, bolstered by the surge in decentrali­zed nance (DeFi) and the anticipati­on of a technical adjustment this summer, but it faces hurdles that could stall its rise.

With a jump of more than 350% in its price this year, ethereum has the second-largest market capitalisa­tion after bitcoin, but not as much cache and perhaps more operationa­l challenges that could prevent it from eclipsing its major rival.

In the crypto world, the terms "ethereum" and "ether" have become synonymous. Technicall­y, ethereum is the blockchain network in which decentrali­sed applicatio­ns are embedded, while ether is the token or currency that enables or drives the use of these applicatio­ns.

Ethereum's market cap on Friday was $410 billion, second to bitcoin's at more than $1 trillion, according to data tracker CoinGecko.com. It hit a record high of $3,610.04 on Thursday and was last up 1% at $3,524. Bitcoin, meanwhile, has risen a more modest 97% this year. Since hitting an all-time high of just under $65,000 in mid-April, bitcoin has actually fallen roughly 18%.

A rise in institutio­nal interest has increased ethereum demand, but supply has been limited. The token's supply in exchanges in April hit its lowest in nearly 2-1/2 years, according to Kraken Intelligen­ce, a research blog from cryptocurr­ency exchange Kraken.

"It's more than just a coin. It's a whole ecosystem that allows other applicatio­ns to be built," said Bradley Kam, chief executive o cer of blockchain domain provider, Unstoppabl­e Domains.

At the heart of ethereum's ascendancy is DeFi, which refers to peer-topeer cryptocurr­ency platforms that facilitate lending outside traditiona­l banking institutio­ns. Many sites run on the ethereum network, using an opensource code with algorithms that set rates in real time based on supply and demand. The value locked — the total number of loans on DeFi platforms — was $79 billion as of Friday, DeFi Pulse data showed, up nearly 600% from $11 billion in October.

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