Stability Curve

Kingsilver ($KSL) gets progressively more stable as supply moves towards a predetermined amount that represents global mass adoption. Kingsilver’s crypto asset reserves are ‘non custodial’, meaning the money managers that actively manage (trade) them do not themselves have direct access, and so regardless of how much value they manage, no trust is needed, since the only way they can extract profit is by performing well as a fund manager.

The more popular $KSL becomes, the less profit is kept within the reserves and the more that will go to the economic actors that work under the hood, until eventually the value of $KSL remains stable, relative to all available crypto assets, with most of the profits from its actively managed reserves going to those economic actors. If collateral withdrawals (selling Kingsilver) outpaces demand for Kingsilver and circulation falls, Kingsilver begins keeping more profit within its reserves, increasing the value of Kingsilver at a faster rate, and so making Kingsilver more attractive to buyers once again.

Kingsilver’s adoption roadmap therefore makes Kingsilver attractive to investors early on. As investors lead to progressively more adoption, which results in Kingsilver slowly becoming more stable, it becomes more attractive to those wishing for a safe haven for their wealth. Kingsilver begins life as an investment vehicle, and ends life as the ultimate decentralised reserve currency on which a portfolio of decentralised stablecoins that maintain their value, even if the national currency it is pegged to loses value.

Last updated

Was this helpful?