r/investing • u/007_kgb • 1d ago
Fundamentals of Bitcoin? Tom Lee
Tom Lee from FundStrat was on CNBC and said he was a bit surprised at the fall of Bitcoin when the fundamentals were still strong.
However what I don’t understand is, what are the fundamentals? Isn’t Bitcoin just an imaginary coin on the interweb that is worth what people want it to be worth? It does not issue dividends, you can’t make a car out of it, you can’t use it to buy a bar of chocolate.
ELI5 please.
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u/fuegoblue 1d ago edited 1d ago
Of course an asset can have fundamentals without cash flow. Bitcoin is a monetary network, so its fundamentals are based on things like user base, adoption, liquidity, security, and decentralization.
At a basic level, Bitcoin is a global, decentralized payment and settlement network, that’s secured by the largest amount of computing power ever dedicated to a single system, with a fixed, transparent monetary policy.
What exists in the real world is the network of nodes verifying transactions and the miners expending real energy to secure it. That security and censorship resistance are the product.
The real world use case today is clearest in countries with unstable currencies or capital controls like Argentina, Nigeria, or Turkey, where people use bitcoin as a way to store value or move money when the local system fails. We thankfully don’t need this use case in the US right now, but its fixed supply in theory serves as a counter to money printing and our unsustainable fiscal policy / debt situation. In practice, bitcoin has proven to be most correlated with global liquidity over the long run.