Sort:  

Payouts are in SBD, which means the weaker Steem is, the more Steem and SP is paid per SBD.

But you are saying that the daily generated pool for post upvotes decreases with the price of Steem.

I'm obviously missing something between these two opposite mechanisms. Would you please elaborate in what currency and how is the daily pool generated (i.e. what factors determine its size). Thank you!

As I understand it, payouts are priced in STEEM. Half of the payout is distributed in SP, and the other half is distributed in a mix of STEEM and SBD at current conversion prices. (It used to be half SP and half SBD, but that changed a while back.) I'm not sure exactly how it determines how much SBD vs. how much STEEM. Something to do with liquidity levels, I think.

So in short (all else being equal), since the payouts are priced in steem: when steem's price is high, payouts' dollar values are high and vice versa.

No, no, I understand payouts. I don't understand how the daily reward pool is generated (its size and in what currency)?

Btw, the payouts are in SBD, which is then split as 50% SP/50 % (SBD and Steem). So the lower the price of Steem, the more Steem we get per SBD (since it's price is "fixed" to the dollar). Right now 1 SBD = 4.77 Steem. Play with the calculators on http://steemdollar.com/ to understand the relationship between SBD and Steem.

Nesting limit reached. Replying to:

Btw, the payouts are in SBD, which is then split as 50% SP/50 % (SBD and Steem).

Check your author rewards in the history section:
Author reward of 0.003 SD, 0.114 STEEM and 0.132 STEEM POWER for dek/no-more-steem-margin-trading-on-poloniex

You were paid in all 3 currencies. 50% STEEM Power (SP) and the other 50% was split between SBD and STEEM. The proportion of SBD and STEEM varies according to some formula that I don't know, but it always seems to be 50% SP.

I don't understand how the daily reward pool is generated (its size and in what currency)?

The whitepaper is vague on that. As far as I can find, it only gives annual numbers. Basically, total numbers of STEEM are inflated at 100% per year, 90% of the new STEEM is distributed to existing SP holders. The remaining 10% "...is distributed to users submitting, voting on, and discussing content.... the actual distribution will depend upon the voting patterns of users..."

That annual reward distribution is described here: https://steem.io/SteemWhitePaper.pdf#page=35, but I don't know exactly how that maps back to the available pool for any particular post.

We are both saying the same thing - it's 50% in SP and 50% in Steem and SBD (the latter two's proportion keeps changing according to the economic logic of the developers - it's not just a formula, they change it by hand, from what I've seen).

The White Paper is written as vaguely as possible. This suggests to me and any investors, that the developers had no idea whether their project was economically sound or not, and they intentionally did not specify certain aspects clearly, which would allow them to tweak things as the system develops. This, however, makes the system rather vulnerable to market speculation - traders are not investing in the system itself, but are speculating on the economic knowledge and whim of the developers. Since modern day trading is all about analyzing widely available data and not the private thought process of a couple of people, this makes Steem rather unattractive (or rather - attractive for bearish trading).

That said, according to page 35 in the White Paper (which you've linked), it seems that the daily pool is generated in Steem. There's also a mechanism for reducing the incentive for mining Steem after a certain block number.

Think about this - either the developers had a perfect vision for the future of Steem and knew at which exact point in its development significant inflation (or oversupply of Steem) would kick in (it's now obvious they overestimated the popularity of their project and actually didn't have a good idea), or they have very bad ideas about programming (hard setting variables is a no no for most programmers) and economics (which no one on this planet fully comprehends; what they've did is put a flag in the middle of a river, over which they now have little control).

Anyway, it's a long topic and I'm grateful for your comment!

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.17
TRX 0.15
JST 0.028
BTC 60699.16
ETH 2352.47
USDT 1.00
SBD 2.52