Transaction fees are skyrocketing, we have to take note

We take a look at rising transaction fees and what they mean to users and retail investors.
Transaction fees are skyrocketing, we have to take note
Transaction fees are skyrocketing, we have to take note
Written by:

Before reading the article, sign up for Cryptogram, a free weekly newsletter on Web3 and crypto.

* indicates required

In the past month, memecoins have been the main narrative that the speculators are trading on and in addition to causing a surge in gas fees, a handful of traders have profited handsomely off their meteoric rises. ERC-based PEPE has been the torch-bearer of this rally and reached a market cap of $1.7 billion after news about it being listed on Binance. On the other hand, Bitcoin Ordinals via BRC-20 has rocked the Bitcoin market with ORDI token registering $90 million trading volume within 12 hours of listing. Daily BTC fees paid to process blocks have reached levels not seen since 2018. 

Daily BTC fees 

Source: Into the Cryptoverse

What’s more absurd is that, for one particular block, the transaction fees paid is higher than the block fees (6.25 BTC that miners earn currently). That’s a first! Miners are happy – the more the fees paid, the lesser the impact of halvings.

Ethereum fees are steep as well

Gas fees are charged for processing transactions on the Ethereum blockchain, and they have been rising at an alarming rate. 

Ethereum per transaction fees (in US$) in 2023

Source: ycharts.com

The sudden onslaught of increasing gas fees has led to decrease in trading activity among small scale users, as it has become increasingly expensive to perform a simple transaction on the network. This has sparked a debate among developers, traders, and retail investors who are finding it difficult to participate in the Ethereum ecosystem due to the gas fees. Okay, so what is likely to happen now?

1. Users are demanding a change

This is not the ideal way to promote blockchain adoption. If users are unhappy, the developers will have to do something about it. While Ethereum already has a roadmap to reduce fees over time, some in the Bitcoin developer community has called for removing Ordinals from its network (link). However, tech changes in blockchain take time to evolve – we can be confident that some solution will be found to ease the network congestion over time though short-term pain can ensue.

2. Role of Layer 2s and Lightning Network 

Layer 2 infrastructure already claim to have the scaling solution that Ethereum needs. Arbitrum, Optimism and Polygon are the top ones currently and are doing a decent job. 

Lightning Network on Bitcoin does a similar job with Binance already contemplating integrating with its platform (link).

Now it leads us to the question – what should you do?

  1. Be patient: Challenges with tech are not new. The great thing about tech is that it finds a way to solve itself over time. Blockchains (especially BTC and ETH) are here to stay but they need to be more scalable and convenient to its users. Continue to read up on the developments around this (Cryptogram newsletter will have you covered mostly as well) and take strategic calls in the medium term. 
  2. Understand the scaling solutions: Scaling solutions can offer good value to users by negating some of the pain. They can be prime candidates for growth in the next bull run. Also, other top blockchains such as Cardano and Solana will claim victory with respect to gas fees but hey, they haven’t had that many memecoins going crazy on them yet have they?

Use promocode TNM51 at www.giottus.com/profile#promo after registration to get Rs.51 worth free Bitcoin.

DisclaimerThis article was authored by Giottus Crypto Exchange as a part of a paid partnership with The News Minute. Crypto products and NFTs are unregulated and can be highly risky. There may be no regulatory recourse for any loss from such transactions. Please do your own research before investing and seek independent legal/financial advice if you are unsure about the investments.

Related Stories

No stories found.
The News Minute
www.thenewsminute.com