Bitcoin’s Hidden Edge: How Mystery Drives Market Advantages and Investor Behavior
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In 2008, filmmaker J.J. Abrams delivered a TED Talk that would go on to become a seminal moment in the director’s career. Years before he would become a household name thanks to the success of blockbusters like 2009’s Star Trek or 2015’s Star Wars: The Force Awakens, Abrams was predominantly a television writer and producer. He had worked on shows like Lost and Alias and, in that time, had cultivated a distinct writing ideology that fueled the majority of his work: the mystery box. In his 2008 TED Talk, Abrams outlined this approach to storytelling extensively.
Abrams’ idea wasn’t just about storytelling. It was about human psychology. People are wired to chase answers, even when the payoff is unclear. It’s a principle that applies far beyond Hollywood. In fact, it’s a phenomenon that can help explain one of the most unpredictable and compelling forces in financial markets today: the bitcoin price.
Bitcoin, after all, is built around one of the greatest modern mysteries: who created it? The elusive figure of Satoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonymous inventor of Bitcoin, has never been conclusively identified. And this lingering enigma isn’t just a fun piece of trivia. It’s a major reason why Bitcoin has captured the imagination of millions and helped fuel the volatility and cultural obsession that often drives up the Bitcoin price.
Bitcoin’s Rise to Success
While cryptocurrency didn’t palpably enter the public zeitgeist until 2020, amid institutional change and COVID-19 lockdowns, Bitcoin was first introduced to the market in 2008. Long before practically anyone else was considering pivoting so wholly into digitized services or goods, a mysterious man named Satoshi Nakamoto published a nine-page white paper titled “Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System.”
For context’s sake, in 2008, MySpace was still the most popular social media platform, and even something as simple as online shopping was still viewed through a heavy lens of skepticism by general consumers. To this end, it would appear as though Nakamoto’s foresight was outright prescient, only lending even greater mystique to the central mystery at the heart of Bitcoin’s founding.
That initial white paper extensively outlined a digitized form of currency that would serve to circumnavigate traditional banks in favor of personalized online currency. In many ways, this allowed Bitcoin to build upon structures that were already in place and have been for decades while using them to innovate in new ways. When you put your money in a bank, it doesn’t simply sit there in a vault with your name on it. Instead, the bank keeps inventory of how much money you’ve given them and then is prepared to pay out that amount to you when you require it. This system has proven largely reliable over the years, with notable exceptions such as runs on banks, in which widespread panic is instilled over the disappearance of funds.