Amidst Polygon’s hardfork and increased profit-taking, which way will MATIC go?

Polygon [MATIC], the sidechain connected to the main Ethereum [ETH] blockchain, completed a hard fork to its proof-of-stake (PoS) network on 17 January. The purpose of the hard fork, as stated in a 12 January blog post, was to make the Polygon network more efficient by introducing two key changes.

Changes included in the Polygon hardfork

First, the hard fork introduced an adjustment as to how gas fees were determined on the network. With the hard fork in place, reportedly:

“The rate of change for the base gas fee will fall to 6.25% (100/16) from the current 12.5% (100/8) in an effort to smooth severe fluctuations in gas prices.”

Second, the hard fork addressed chain reorganization, to reduce the time taken to complete a data block on the chain. This would resolve the challenge of reorgs, which occur when validator nodes receive conflicting information and create a temporary split in the blockchain.

This usually complicated the confirmation of the validity of transactions, as the nodes must reconcile which version of the blockchain is accurate.

MATIC amid the latest rally

Exchanging hands at $1.01 at press time, MATIC’s price has rallied by 33% since the year started, data from CoinMarketCap showed. 

As the overall cryptocurrency market has grown, MATIC has experienced a corresponding increase in network activity since 1 January.

Besides its close correlation to leading coin Bitcoin [BTC], the recent surge in MATIC’s value was attributable to the influx of new demand for the altcoin and the increase in the count of active addresses transacting it, data from Santiment revealed.

According to the on-chain analytics platform, since the trading year commenced, the count of daily active addresses trading MATIC has grown by 52%. Likewise, the demand for MATIC has risen by 47% within the period under consideration, as the count of new MATIC addresses created daily has embarked on an uptrend.

A review of MATIC’s exchange activity revealed an uptick in profit-taking by the altcoin holders. According to Santiment, since 5 January, MATIC’s supply on exchanges has climbed by 4%. Conversely, its supply outside of known exchanges has dropped by 0.32% since then. 

An increase in the supply of cryptocurrency on exchanges typically indicated that more of the currency was being offered for sale in the open market. Typically, such increments can lead to a decrease in the price of the crypto asset if demand for it does not also increase. 

However, in MATIC’s case, the demand was rallying at press time, so last week’s incessant profit-taking left no impact on its price.

Source : ambcrypto

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