The Cryptocurrency Ecosystem: A New Benchmark Study

 | May 17, 2017 01:41AM ET

It is clear by now to even the most hardened skeptic that cryptocurrency, the class of assets of which Bitcoin is the paradigm, is much more than a passing fad. Yes, the field may once have been too closely associated with survivalists, cranks, and bit players in the story of the founding of Facebook (NASDAQ:FB), but as of April 2017, by which time the combined market value of all such currencies was $27 billion, writing off the whole field looked very much like a form of blindness.

It isn’t merely that $27 billion is an impressive big number (though it is). It is that along the way to this size, the industry has generated new ways of doing business and thinking about doing business which are in turn proving themselves. Cryptocurrency isn’t a fad: it’s an ecosystem.

Accordingly, a little more than nine years after the publication of the landmark paper by Satoshi Nakamoto, Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance has issued its “first global cryptocurrency benchmarking study.” It offers the public “an empirical picture of the current state of this still maturing industry.”

The graph below illustrates the dramatic growth of the industry in little more than one year, from February 2016 through March 2017.