# Exchange Articoli collegati

Il Centro Notizie HTX fornisce gli articoli più recenti e le analisi più approfondite su "Exchange", coprendo tendenze di mercato, aggiornamenti sui progetti, sviluppi tecnologici e politiche normative nel settore crypto.

From Pizza to Unit of Account: A Prehistory of Bitcoin Price Discovery

From Pizza to Unit of Account: The Prehistory of Bitcoin Price Discovery This article traces Bitcoin's earliest price discovery mechanisms, focusing on its functional evolution as a unit of account rather than its price trajectory. The analysis centers on a nine-month period from October 2009 to July 2010, identifying three distinct, sequential layers of price formation. The narrative begins with the cost-of-production anchor established by NewLibertyStandard in October 2009, which calculated a unilateral USD/BTC exchange rate based on the electricity cost of mining. This constituted a posted rate, not a market-discovered price. The second layer emerged with peer-to-peer (P2P) discovery mechanisms starting in March 2010. This included Dustin Dollar's Bitcoin Market platform, which introduced a basic public order book, and forum-based实物 trades. The pivotal event in this phase was Laszlo Hanyecz's purchase of two pizzas for 10,000 BTC on May 22, 2010. Critically, the offer was made exclusively in BTC ("10,000 bitcoins for a couple of pizzas"), marking the first documented instance where Bitcoin functionally acted as a unit of account to price another good in a real transaction, 21 days before Hanyecz later provided a USD anchor (~$25). The third layer commenced in July 2010 with Jed McCaleb's launch of the Mt.Gox exchange. Its continuous order book, with last price, highs, lows, and volume, provided the first standardized, externally referenceable format for BTC/USD prices. The article argues this three-stage evolution—production cost anchor → P2P discovery → centralized continuous quotation—exhibits structural similarities to the historical price discovery paths of other asset classes, such as 17th-century VOC shares in Amsterdam and 19th-century grain futures on the Chicago Board of Trade. It posits that all markets follow a coarse-grained path from private bookkeeping to posted quotes to continuous matching, placing Bitcoin's early development within a centuries-long lineage of financial institutional evolution.

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From Pizza to Unit of Account: A Prehistory of Bitcoin Price Discovery

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