Filecoin vs Arweave : The Ultimate Comparison



Key Takeaways:

Filecoin and Arweave are both decentralized data storage providers, but they serve different set of clients. Filecoin focuses on clients with large data storage requirements within fixed timeframes, primarily web2 clients, whereas Arweave is well-suited for retail and web3 clients looking to store their data permanently on the internet at a very low cost.

In both Filecoin and Arweave, clients need to pay in their native tokens to purchase storage from these networks.

Filecoin heavily subsidizes its miners to accept verified clients on the network through the Filecoin Plus program. By allocating over 70% of its supply for incentives, Filecoin provides higher rewards to miners and highly competitive costs for clients who switch to Filecoin for their data storage needs.

The supply of $AR, the native token of Arweave, is currently 100% in circulation, while in Filecoin, it's 22.5% as of today, and the remaining supply will take 27 years to fully unlock.

$AR currently has zero inflation rate, while $FIL has an annual inflation rate of over 40%, which will gradually decrease over time. Filecoin burns the base fees from its revenue, and increased demand on the Filecoin network could potentially control higher inflation due to this burning mechanism.

Filecoin currently dominates the decentralized storage market with over 70% market share. They have recorded over a 1000% growth in active deals in the past year, while Arweave recorded over 60% growth in weave size.

From an investment perspective:

Filecoin is an excellent solution for clients with large data needs. It competes with Amazon AWS and Google Cloud, offering more competitive prices. However, Filecoin has heavily subsidized the network by allocating a significant portion for incentives.

Its tokenomics design relies on creating higher demand for Filecoin to sustain its price in the long term. I believe even if the reduction in incentives they could probably offer better cost than AWS in next 5-7 years so its going to be interesting to watch how much market they could capture.

As for Arweave, there is minimal selling pressure on AR from the supply side, but there is also a lack of additional incentives for miners. On the client side, Permaweb is a new primitive in data storage, and it may gain more traction from startups with low data and permanent storage requirements in the near future.

In conclusion, while $AR seems stable on the supply side, demand is relatively low. When we discuss $FIL, demand is increasing, but supply is also on the rise. To maintain a balance, locked and burnt supply should always be higher than newly mined supply.

FIL's price action can fundamentally perform well when we reach the stage where more FIL is being burnt and locked than is being mined.

Disclaimer: I've shared more thoughts here, Not financial advice of any kind.
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