Economy
The Economics of Bitcoin: Supply, Demand, and Market Dynamics
Bitcoin, the pioneering cryptocurrency, has reshaped the monetary landscape with its unique characteristics and decentralized nature. Understanding the economics of Bitcoin includes delving into the interaction of delivery, demand, and marketplace dynamics that power its value and affect its adoption. This article explores those key elements to provide a comprehensive evaluation of Bitcoin’s economic framework.
The Basics of Bitcoin
Bitcoin was brought in 2009 by way of an anonymous entity called Satoshi Nakamoto. It operates on a decentralized ledger referred to as the blockchain, which statistics all transactions throughout a network of computers. This system removes the want for intermediaries, including banks, Stock Blast Pro, and gives transparency and security.
Supply: The Finite Nature of Bitcoin
One of Bitcoin’s maximum special capabilities is its limited delivery. Unlike conventional fiat currencies, which important banks can print at will, Bitcoin’s delivery is capped at 21 million cash. This scarcity is embedded in its code and performs a crucial function in its economic model.
- Fixed Supply: Bitcoin’s finite delivery guarantees that it cannot be devalued through inflation, making it a deflationary asset.
- Mining: New bitcoins are delivered into movement through a manner known as mining, where effective computer systems solve complicated mathematical issues. The reward for mining halves approximately every 4 years in an occasion known as the halving, decreasing the charge at which new bitcoins are created.
- Predictable Issuance: The predictable nature of Bitcoin’s issuance schedule lets market participants expect supply adjustments, contributing to its attraction as a shop of price.
Demand: Factors Influencing Bitcoin’s Popularity
The demand for Bitcoin is motivated by a selection of things, which includes its application, investor hobby, and macroeconomic conditions.
- Store of Value: Many investors view Bitcoin as “digital gold” because of its scarcity and capability to hedge against inflation and monetary uncertainty.
- Medium of Exchange: While Bitcoin’s adoption as a medium of change continues to be growing, it’s miles general with the aid of a developing range of traders and carrier carriers internationally.
- Speculative Investment: The unstable nature of Bitcoin attracts speculative investors seeking excessive returns, using call for and influencing its rate.
- Technological Adoption: Advances in blockchain technology and increasing recognition of cryptocurrencies make contributions to Bitcoin’s call for.
- Regulatory Environment: The regulatory panorama surrounding Bitcoin can impact calls for, as favourable guidelines inspire adoption even as restrictive regulations can dampen hobby.
Market Dynamics: Price Volatility and Influences
Bitcoin’s marketplace dynamics are characterized by good-sized charge volatility, encouraged by diverse internal and external factors.
- Market Sentiment: Public belief and sentiment play a large function in Bitcoin’s rate movements. News, social media developments, and influential figures can cause rapid price adjustments.
- Liquidity: The liquidity of Bitcoin markets affects its rate stability. Higher liquidity has a tendency to reduce volatility, at the same time as lower liquidity can cause sharp price swings.
- Market Manipulation: Despite efforts to alter, Bitcoin markets can be liable to manipulation, consisting of pump-and-unload schemes, which can create artificial rate movements.
- Institutional Involvement: The access of institutional traders, consisting of hedge price range and publicly traded organizations, into the Bitcoin market has improved its legitimacy and inspired charge dynamics.
Bitcoin’s Role inside the Broader Cryptocurrency Ecosystem
Bitcoin’s economic standards and marketplace conduct additionally have an effect on different cryptocurrencies. For instance, Litecoin, regularly known as the silver to Bitcoin’s gold, stocks lots of Bitcoin’s characteristics but with a few differences in technology and market dynamics. Users may shop their Litecoin in a secure Litecoin Wallet which gives comparable functionalities to Bitcoin wallets, making sure safe and obvious transactions.
The Future of Bitcoin’s Economics
As Bitcoin continues to mature, its monetary framework will evolve, prompted by technological improvements, regulatory tendencies, and changing market conditions.
- Scalability Solutions: Innovations including the Lightning Network intend to improve Bitcoin’s scalability and transaction pace, enhancing its application as a medium of trade.
- Regulatory Clarity: Greater regulatory clarity can foster a stronger and steadier environment for Bitcoin, encouraging broader adoption.
- Institutional Adoption: Continued hobby and investment from institutional players can offer liquidity and balance, potentially decreasing volatility.
- Global Economic Trends: Macroeconomic elements, inclusive of inflation, geopolitical tensions, and financial crises, can affect Bitcoin’s call for a hedge towards traditional monetary structures.
Understanding Bitcoin’s Economic Impact
Understanding the economics of Bitcoin requires a nuanced appreciation of its delivery constraints, call for drivers and market dynamics. Its precise characteristics as a scarce, decentralized virtual asset role it as a current force in the monetary world. As the cryptocurrency landscape evolves, Bitcoin’s financial concepts will be preserved to form its function in the worldwide economy, supplying possibilities and challenges for buyers, regulators, and clients alike. The ongoing speak among innovation and regulation can be crucial in determining Bitcoin’s future impact.
Economy
Customs Steps up Push on Green Tax Awareness Ahead of July 1 Launch
By Adedapo Adesanya
The Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) has intensified its nationwide sensitisation campaign on the implementation of the Green Tax Surcharge and related fiscal adjustments ahead of the policy’s commencement on July 1, 2026.
The service disclosed this in a statement published on its official X handle on Monday, saying the initiative is aimed at promoting environmental sustainability, reducing carbon emissions and encouraging the importation of cleaner vehicles into the country in line with global environmental standards.
According to the statement, the latest sensitisation programme was held at the Apapa Area Command on Friday, June 26, 2026, under the theme, “Implementation of the Green Tax Surcharge and Related Fiscal Adjustments.”
The event brought together customs officers, licensed customs agents, freight forwarders, importers and other key stakeholders to familiarise them with the new policy ahead of its implementation.
Representing the Comptroller-General of Customs, Mr Adewale Adeniyi, the Zonal Coordinator for Zone A, Mr Mohammed Babadende, said the exercise was organised to ensure stakeholders fully understand the policy and its implementation framework before it takes effect.
“This sensitisation is designed to ensure that every stakeholder clearly understands the policy before implementation. Our objective is to eliminate uncertainty, promote voluntary compliance and guarantee uniform application of the Green Tax Surcharge across all commands,” Mr Adeniyi said.
He stressed that effective stakeholder engagement would help ensure a seamless rollout of the policy while improving compliance across the country’s ports and border stations.
Delivering a technical presentation, the Comptroller in charge of Tariff, System Audit and Coordination, Mr Murtala Muazu, explained that the Green Tax Surcharge differs from conventional fiscal measures and would therefore require a separate assessment process.
Mr Muazu disclosed that the agency has introduced a simplified implementation mechanism through the Harmonised System (HS) Code declaration platform to facilitate accurate assessment and ease compliance by importers and clearing agents.
He further revealed that the federal government has simultaneously reviewed existing import charges on vehicles to cushion the effect of the new environmental levy.
According to him, import levies on vehicles have been reduced from 20 per cent to 10 per cent, while duties on used vehicles have been cut from 15 per cent to five per cent.
The customs said the reductions are intended to offset the impact of the Green Tax Surcharge while supporting legitimate trade and ensuring businesses are not unduly burdened by the new policy.
Area Controllers who attended the sensitisation programme urged importers, licensed customs agents and members of the public to support the initiative, noting that the reduction in import levies would lower the cost of doing business, facilitate legitimate trade and ultimately contribute to reducing transportation costs across the country.
Stakeholders at the event welcomed the initiative but called for sustained public awareness campaigns to ensure broader understanding, minimise confusion and encourage voluntary compliance as the rollout date approaches.
The Green Tax Surcharge is scheduled to take effect on July 1, 2026, as part of the federal government’s broader efforts to promote environmentally friendly transportation and align Nigeria’s import policies with global climate and sustainability objectives.
Economy
Access Holdings, Fidelity Bank, Chams Emerge Busiest Equities
By Dipo Olowookere
The three busiest equities on the floor of the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited last week were Access Holdings, Fidelity Bank, and Chams Holdco.
The trio accounted for 20.90 per cent and 5.69 per cent of the total trading volume and value, respectively, after trading 485.749 million units worth N7.656 billion in 17,843 deals.
In the week, investors transacted 2.324 billion shares valued at N134.486 billion in 249,328 deals versus the 3.075 billion shares worth N254.614 billion executed in 287,157 deals in the previous week.
The financial services space led the activity chart with 1.523 billion stocks sold for N47.542 billion in 105,230 deals, contributing 65.53 per cent and 35.35 per cent to the total trading volume and value, respectively. The ICT industry exchanged 198.821 million shares worth N32.622 billion in 29,905 deals, and the consumer goods sector posted a turnover of 151.635 million shares worth N10.933 billion in 23,951 deals.
In the five-day trading week, 22 equities appreciated versus 11 equities a week earlier, 57 equities depreciated versus 78 equities of the previous week, and 67 equities remained unchanged versus 57 equities in the preceding week.
McNichols gained 26.47 per cent to trade at N8.60, International Energy Insurance appreciated by 14.43 per cent to N5.79, GTCO expanded by 10.69 per cent to N127.90, First Holdco jumped by 10.00 per cent to N55.00, and Airtel Africa also climbed 10.00 per cent to settle at N4,358.80.
On the flip side, Trans-Nationwide Express declined by 26.79 per cent to N3.28, Deap Capital slipped by 23.31 per cent to N3.75, Abbey Mortgage Bank lost 20.30 per cent to trade at N8.05, Aradel Holdings contracted by 19.00 per cent to N1,417.50, and Regency Assurance dropped 18.56 per cent to close at 79 Kobo.
The All-Share Index (ASI) and the market capitalisation, which measures the performance level of Customs Street, depreciated last week by 1.65 per cent and 1.60 per cent each to 232,049.02 points and N148.905 trillion, respectively.
Similarly, all other indices finished lower except the CG, banking, AFR Bank Value, AFR Div Yield and MERI Value indices, which grew by 2.40 per cent, 3.51 per cent, 3.28 per cent, 9.93 per cent and 0.56 per cent, respectively.
Economy
Proposed Import Ban Won’t Revive Nigeria’s Textile Industry—CPPE
By Adedapo Adesanya
The Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise (CPPE) has cautioned against the Senate’s resolution seeking to ban the importation of textile fabrics, warning that such a move could be counterintuitive as it would undermine key industries, threaten millions of jobs and fail to revive Nigeria’s struggling textile sector.
According to the chief executive of the think-tank, Mr Muda Yusuf, while the objective of revitalising the textile industry was commendable, an outright import prohibition would likely create more economic challenges than solutions.
The Senate had urged the federal government to implement an import ban for an initial period of five years. The motion, sponsored by Senator Sunday Katung, is to create a protected window for domestic cotton farmers and local textile mills to scale up production.
Mr Yusuf noted that the import ban wasn’t the major driving force behind the country’s ailing textile sector, adding that it was driven mainly by structural constraints such as high energy costs, poor infrastructure, expensive credit and obsolete technology.
Other factors, he said, driving the decline of the sector included logistics bottlenecks, smuggling and policy inconsistency, rather than import competition.
According to him, restricting textile imports will disrupt production across the country’s garment, fashion, tailoring, furniture and interior design industries, which depend heavily on imported fabrics as production inputs.
He said that Nigeria’s fashion, garment-making and tailoring industry, valued at about N10 trillion, supported an estimated 10 million livelihoods and represented one of the country’s most vibrant creative economy sectors.
He further stated that the sector generates significant domestic value addition through design, tailoring, branding, embroidery, merchandising and retailing, often exceeding the value of the imported textile inputs.
“Restricting textile imports would increase production costs, reduce consumer choice and threaten thousands of micro, small and medium enterprises engaged in fashion, tailoring and garment manufacturing,” he said.
Mr Yusuf added that textile fabrics were also critical inputs for the furniture and interior design industry, valued at about N7 trillion, warning that supply disruptions would weaken the competitiveness of manufacturers.
He further noted that imported textile fabrics already attracted a combined Import Duty and Import Adjustment Tax of between 35 per cent and 45 per cent, yet the existing tariff protection had not restored the competitiveness of local textile manufacturers.
“The core problem lies in production economics rather than import penetration. An import ban addresses the symptom while leaving the underlying causes unresolved,” he said.
Mr Yusuf also maintained that local textile manufacturers currently lacked the capacity to meet the quantity, quality and diversity of fabrics required by the country’s fashion, garment, furniture and interior design industries.
He warned that an outright import ban could therefore create supply shortages and negatively affect downstream sectors that generated significantly more employment than textile manufacturing itself.
The CPPE boss advocated a comprehensive value-chain strategy to revive the textile industry and called for the restoration of domestic cotton production through improved security, mechanisation, better seedlings, extension services and guaranteed off-take arrangements.
He also stressed the need for affordable long-term financing, access to modern technology, a reliable energy supply and a more competitive operating environment for manufacturers.
Among other recommendations, Yusuf urged the government to prioritise locally produced textiles and garments for uniforms used by the military, paramilitary agencies, schools and other public institutions.
He also recommended the establishment of a Textile Competitiveness Fund financed from textile-related import tax revenues to support technology upgrades and industry modernisation.
Other measures proposed include strengthening border enforcement to curb smuggling and implementing reforms aimed at reducing energy and financing costs while improving industrial infrastructure.
Mr Yusuf stressed that sustainable revival of Nigeria’s textile industry would depend on improving competitiveness rather than imposing additional import restrictions.
He warned that a blanket import ban could encourage smuggling, reduce customs revenue and weaken a broader value chain that contributed substantially to employment and economic growth.
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