At the moment Bitcoin Munari starts being publicly traded, scarcity becomes evident. The liquidity provided at launch determines the initial depth, while the flow of orders and the consistency of volume are leading indicators of how available the supply is and how it gets absorbed.
Presale tokens are made fully available at launch, so early trading reflects holders’ decisions right away. There will be no delayed tranches, and no future presale allocations to be released to the market later are planned. Thus, market behavior provides direct insight into scarcity dynamics without any intervention or control by the administration.
The has run a coverage that looked into this phenomenon. It was found that projects that come into trading with their distribution completed often see interest quickly focus on the quality of liquidity and turnover patterns, since these are the indicators that provide the earliest evidence of how the limited supply is mixing with the demand.
Network Commitments Extend Scarcity Beyond the Market Layer
After distribution concludes, the BTCM supply entering circulation is governed by predefined participation mechanisms. Validator rewards total 6,090,000 BTCM and are released over ten years with declining annual emissions, tying new issuance to network activity.
Participation requires explicit commitments:
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Full validators commit 10,000 BTCM with dedicated infrastructure
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Mobile validators commit 1,000 BTCM on supported Android devices
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Delegators commit from 100 BTCM with a defined unbonding period
Tokens committed through these paths are removed from immediate circulation for the duration of participation. This introduces a second layer of scarcity, operating independently of trading behavior and reinforcing supply constraints over time.
As these commitments scale, scarcity is no longer confined to market access alone. It becomes embedded within the network itself.
