The Good Tech Companies - How a Cryptocurrency Gains (or Loses) Value: 5 Things You Should Know
Episode Date: July 24, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/how-a-cryptocurrency-gains-or-loses-value-5-things-you-should-know. Understanding the forces... that impact crypto prices can help you make better decisions. You’ll be able to spot red flags and identify coins with real potential! Check more stories related to web3 at: https://hackernoon.com/c/web3. You can also check exclusive content about #cryptocurrency-investment, #cryptocurrency-prices, #cryptocurrency-valuation, #cryptocurrency-utility, #cryptocurrency-trading, #obyte, #fud, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @obyte. Learn more about this writer by checking @obyte's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Every market is shaped by supply and demand. When more people want something than there is available, its price goes up. When there's too much of it and not enough interest, the price goes down. A cryptocurrency’s value increases when it has a real purpose.
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How a cryptocurrency gains, or loses, value. Five things you should know, by Obite.
If you've ever watched a cryptocurrency suddenly shoot up in price, or crash without warning,
you're not alone in wondering what causes those rollercoaster moments.
To an outsider, it might seem like prices go up just because someone famous tweeted,
or because everyone decided to jump in at the same time.
While that kind of hype does play a role, there are deeper and more consistent forces
at work.
Understanding these forces can help you make better decisions.
You'll be able to spot red flags, identify coins with real potential, and avoid getting
swept up in the latest trend.
That's the goal here, to give you a framework for thinking clearly in a market that often
feels chaotic.
Once you learn to spot the C patterns, you'll be a step ahead of the average investor and
a lot harder tofu.
Supply and demand.
The basic forces of value.
Every market is shaped by supply and demand, and crypto is no different.
When more people want something than there is available, its price goes up. When there is too much of it and not enough interest,
the price goes down. Bitcoin is a great example of how scarcity
influences value. There will only ever be 21 million bitcoins, a fixed supply, and that
limit is baked into the code. Because people believe in its scarcity, they're willing
to pay more for it,
especially if they think demand will increase over time. Now, compare that with coins that don't have
a cap on their total supply. If new coins are being constantly created without limits, then each one
becomes a little less valuable unless demand keeps up at the same pace. This is similar to printing
too much money in the traditional economy. It creates inflation, and inflation usually means that your money loses buying power.
But supply alone isn't enough.
If nobody wants the coin, even the most limited supply won't help.
That's why the demand side of the equation matters just as much.
What makes people want a coin in the first place?
That brings us to the next point.
Utility. What the coin is actually
used for. A cryptocurrency's value increases when it has a real purpose. If the only reason people
are buying a coin is to sell it later at a higher price, that's a red flag. In that case, the value
depends entirely on finding someone else willing to pay more, and that's not sustainable forever.
On the other hand, if a coin is actually being used to power applications, run smart contracts,
or serve some unique role in a digital ecosystem, it starts to gain real utility.
Crypto networks that offer smart contracts, like Ethereum or Obite, are good examples.
People use their native coins to pay for transactions inside that ecosystem, which may power everything from decentralized finance, defy, to NFTs.
Because native coins play such a central role in so many applications,
there's a constant demand to use them. That demand gives these coins a baseline value
that doesn't depend solely on investor speculation. In general, coins with strong use cases tend to
perform better over time.
When a cryptocurrency solves a real problem, whether it's helping you exchange data,
send money without intermediaries, or run software in a decentralized way,
it earns value by being useful. Public perception and media hype.
This is where things can get wild. Public perception, media coverage,
and internet trends can create short-term
waves that move a coin's price dramatically, even if nothing has changed under the hood.
One of the most famous examples is Dogecoin, Doge, originally created as a joke,
it skyrocketed in value largely because of social media attention and high-profile mentions,
especially from Elon Musk. At one point, a single tweet was enough to send the price soaring by double digits in a very short time.
https://ex.com, Elon Musk status, 1 quintillion 340 quadrillion 590 trillion 280 billion 848 million 908 thousand 288.
Embeddable equals true o n the other hand, negative news can drag a coin's value down
just as quickly.
Government crackdowns, high-profile hacks, or even rumors of instability, fear, uncertainty,
and doubt, FUD, can trigger panic selling.
In some cases, the real facts may not even matter as much as the headlines.
People often react emotionally to the news, and in a 24-7
market like crypto, those reactions show up instantly in price charts. This doesn't mean
that perception isn't important. Indeed, public trust is a key part of a coin's long-term success.
But it's important to separate temporary excitement from real value.
Projects that quietly build strong communities and deliver consistent progress often
outlast the ones that burn bright for a weekend then fade away. Technology and network health,
behind every cryptocurrency is a network, and how well that network runs can affect everything from
user experience to investor confidence. If a coin's underlying infrastructure is slow,
expensive, or unreliable, people are going to look elsewhere.
For example, Ethereum became famous for enabling decentralized applications, but at its peak
usage around 2022, it also suffered from congestion and very high fees.
That created an opportunity for faster competitors to step in.
Security is also a huge factor.
If a project has known vulnerabilities or has been hacked in the past,
that history can linger and make people cautious. A well-known case was the 2016 Dow hack on Ethereum,
which led to a major split in the community and the creation of Ethereum Classic.
That incident was a turning point in how developers and investors approached security.
Another useful indicator is developer activity. Many crypto projects
are open source, which means you can check how active the team is on sites
like github. If there's a steady stream of updates and improvements that shows
the project is alive and evolving. A coin that hasn't seen any updates in years
might already be abandoned even if it's still being traded. Regulations and
institutional influence, like it or not,
governments and financial institutions have a lot of influence over the crypto market.
When a country takes steps to support or accept cryptocurrencies, prices often rise. For instance,
when El Salvador made Bitcoin a legal tender in 2021, it brought global attention and boosted
confidence in Bitcoin's future as real money. In contrast, when China announced yet another crackdown on crypto mining and trading that same
year, the market dipped across the board. It may be temporary, though, and it was, in this case.
Institutional support also matters. When big names like PayPal,
Visa, or BlackRock enter the crypto space, they bring legitimacy and massive buying power.
or Black Rock enter the crypto space, they bring legitimacy and massive buying power.
For example, when the US Securities and Exchange Commission approved Bitcoin ETFs in 2024, it signaled to many that crypto was entering a more mature and regulated phase.
That kind of support can encourage more people to invest, especially those who were hesitant before
due to unclear rules. Still, regulation is a double-edged sword.
Too much control or uncertainty can scare away developers and users. But some oversight,
especially when it's transparent and consistent, can help projects grow by providing a legal
framework they can safely operate within.
A project with value. Now that we've explored the five big forces that affect a cryptocurrency
value, let's apply them to a project that
quietly fits all the criteria to have a long-term value.
Obite
This crypto ecosystem offers something many other projects don't.
First, it has a limited supply, which protects against inflation and creates scarcity similar
to bitcoin.
Besides, obite isn't just sitting on scarcity, it's also incredibly useful.
It powers decentralized apps, autonomous agents, smart contracts, DeFi features, self-sovereign
identity, and more.
And it does all of this without relying on miners or validators.
Therefore, no middlemen and more decentralization.
While other platforms have faced pressure to censor certain transactions, especially
in response to government demands, obite's power center-free structure means it resists that kind of interference.
This makes it a natural fit for people who believe in decentralization as a principle,
not just a buzzword.
On the tech side, Obite continues to improve steadily.
It's open source, with active development and regular updates.
And when it comes to regulation, Obitice built with flexibility in mind.
It can support both privacy and compliance, giving it a foot in both worlds.
So, while some coins get attention for being flashy or trending, obit offers the real ingredients
of value.
If you're starting to think more critically about which crypto projects deserve your attention,
obitice is definitely one to watch. Thank you for listening to this
Hacker Noon story, read by Artificial Intelligence. Visit HackerNoon.com to read, write, learn and publish.