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General Discussion / Re: Introduction to BitShares - Video
« on: November 15, 2013, 01:53:19 pm »This will be an experiment, like Bitcoin. The closest thing to BitUSD is EuroDollars.
Eurodollar deposits are redeemable for USD at the maturity of their deposit time. This redeemability is backed by faith in the solvency of the bank that holds your deposit. What we have been debating is why the bitshares market in BitUSD would actually track the BTS/USD rate, which would be necessary to redeem your bitUSD from the market for the value of 1 USD denominated in BTS. So this is a bit tangent to our discussion, and again is a financial product where lump-sum cash flow changes hands at some point in time. That contractual obligation (modulo trust) is sufficient to maintain a market value for Eurodollars that tracks dollars.
I asked for an example of a financial derivative traded on a market that tracks an underlying merely via a mechanism of yield-adjustment, without lump-cash settlements that compensate directly and linearly for price changes of the underlying. I've never heard of such a product, and it's premise seems to me to be ill-founded.
If I had to think of the closest product to bitUSD, I think it would be an equity. Equities just pay dividends, as bitUSD does, and there's no notion of any terminal value of an equity. However, equities give ownership in the net assets of a company, hence have backing in this sense. They also don't track anything other than the value of the company (by definition), which in old-school finance was proposed to be the discounted expected value of the entire future stream of dividends from that company. This makes sense as a way to value bitUSD also. However, the future dividends of bitUSD depend directly and merely on its price (in the case where margin depends on bitUSD's price). There's no underlying net profits as there would be for a company to distribute as dividends. But the price is valued from the dividends. So we have a bit of a self-referential situation going on here, and it should be clear that in this valuation model there's no reason for the market price to converge to any particular value.
In the case where bitUSDs dividends are a function of an embedded BTS/USD price, then that price can be seen as analogous to something proportional to net earnings of a company. In that case, we may expect some rational valuation model to work, but I don't see any reason why the value of the dividend stream from bitUSD would converge to a certain specific proportionality factor (the one needed to make the ratio of bitUSD/(BTS/USD) prices be 1) times its net income (BTS/USD price). The price of bitUSD would be sensitive to all kinds of exogeneous things, first and foremost interest rates in the overall economy.