VeChain Is Theoretically Interesting But That Doesn’t Make It a Safe Bet

VeChain (CCC:VET-USD) is a different animal from most other cryptocurrencies.

A concept token for VeChain (VET).
A concept token for VeChain (VET).

Source: Shutterstock

In any argument about cryptocurrencies, it’s important to separate their profitability potential from their underlying utility.

As memes like Shiba Inu (CCC:SHIB-USD) have confirmed, you don’t need robust fundamentals (or any fundamentals) to spark significant upside.

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Admittedly, it’s difficult to do for VeChain as it represents the next logical step higher in the blockchain evolution.

At first, cryptocurrencies entered our reality to promote frictionless exchanges of assets of economic value across the internet. Obviously, the initiative was successful.

Soon thereafter, many tech wizards wondered if they could apply blockchain solutions for other applications.

The advent of the smart contract—the ability to foster deals without the involvement of a third-party (human) intermediary was nothing short of revolutionary. If it’s possible for two parties to agree to terms through these mechanisms, then the sky’s the limit regarding use cases.

For VeChain, the focus is on blockchain-powered supply chain platforms.

A Closer Look at VET

Coinmarketcap.com states that VET “aims to use distributed governance and Internet of Things (IoT) technology to create an ecosystem which solves some of the major problems with supply chain management.”

That’s a fancy way of saying that VeChain removes the centralized administration of supply chain protocols and instead fosters a consensus-driven directive.

More importantly, the decentralization of supply chains offers a critical advantage.

“Using transparent technology with no single point of weakness or control allows for greater security, efficiency and ease of tracking products in a given supply chain, while reducing cost through trustless automation,” according to Coinmarketcap.com

Indeed, cyberattacks such as distributed denial of service (DDoS) can grind an enterprise to a halt. Thus, decentralization distributes vulnerability points, allowing enterprises to be resilient.

VeChain Solves One Problem, Introduces Another

Obviously, I don’t know the late great President Abraham Lincoln personally. But if I did, I’d imagine he would tell me that he’s not a big fan of VeChain or any other utility-based cryptocurrency.

I mean, the man quoted poet John Lydgate. “You can please some of the people all of the time, you can please all of the people some of the time, but you can’t please all of the people all of the time.”