Should You Forget Bitcoin and Buy Ethereum Instead?

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Bitcoin‘s (CRYPTO: BTC) price more than doubled to a record high during the past 12 months. Four catalysts drove that rally: the approvals of Bitcoin’s first spot price exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in January, its latest four-year halving in April, the Federal Reserve’s two interest rate cuts, and Trump’s victory in the presidential election.

The ETFs made it easier for mainstream and institutional investors to invest in Bitcoin, the halving lowered Bitcoin’s supply growth rate by reducing the rewards for mining in half, and the Fed’s rate cuts will likely drive investors back toward cryptocurrencies, growth stocks, and more speculative investments. Trump’s incoming administration is also expected to reverse the Biden administration’s restrictions on the crypto market.

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Image source: Getty Images.

All those tailwinds make the world’s top cryptocurrency an attractive investment right now. But as Bitcoin hovers near its record highs, investors can also consider investing in smaller cryptocurrencies still trading below their all-time highs. Let’s take a closer look at Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH), the world’s second-most valuable cryptocurrency, to see whether it fits the profile as a more compelling buy than Bitcoin right now.

Bitcoin is a proof-of-work (PoW) token that must be digitally mined with power-hungry ASIC (application-specific integrated circuit) miners. It has a finite supply of 21 million coinns, and almost 20 million of them have already been mined.

The difficulty of mining Bitcoin, which doubles with each four-year halving, is gradually slowing down that process. The last Bitcoin will likely be mined by 2140. That scarcity makes it more similar to gold, silver, and other precious metals than other cryptocurrencies.

Ethereum, which hosts ether as its native token, was once a PoW blockchain like Bitcoin. But in 2022, it transitioned to the more energy-efficient proof-of-stake (PoS) mechanism in a process called The Merge.

PoS tokens like Ethereum’s can’t be mined. Instead, its investors “stake” (or lock up) their tokens on the blockchain to earn interest-like rewards. Unlike PoW blockchains, PoS blockchains also support smart contracts, which are used to develop decentralized apps (dApps), non-fungible tokens (NFTs), and other crypto assets. That’s why ether’s value is often pegged to Ethereum’s popularity among developers, while Bitcoin is more frequently valued by its scarcity.

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