- Edited
Rasuki OHM is free floating. we cannot peg the price to assets that are no liquid, that's why we have liquid backing, value of our assets/ohm that are simply sitting in out treasury and not locked.
Inverse bonds are here to provide a soft floor, why is it "soft" because it will be up to the market to defend it, not an automated process.
The bottom line is OHM is our underlying asset and foundation.
gOHM price is ohm*index. Slow down the index and yes gOHM will have less support as one side of the equation will be slowing down. But in my opinion we need to look at the fundamentals of what makes up gOHM and that is OHM.
Why does OHM have emissions (ie gohm index), well to expand supply and avoid holders getting absurdly diluted in the process (we are currently emitting into a vaccum, breaking up the same cookie into more and more pieces, not adding more cookies into the jar), but more importantly to cover dilution to holders as a result OHM minted from bonds.
If we have no reserve bonds why would we be issuing OHM to cover dilution from bonds?
while we are inverse bonding why would we be diluting backing/ohm - having no bond revenue coming in?
You want $ liquid backing / OHM to go up, you want the floor to go up, because floor going up will make price go up which will eventually lead to price trading at levels that are good for bonds and the positive flywheel starts again.
The whole idea of inverse bond is for OHM liquid backing to act as a soft floor and get us trending back in the right direction, we need to support that endeavour as much as we can. If you keep the tap open it makes it harder to contain the leak. Proposal is not about reworking OIP18 completely, simply to make logical adjustments to make inverse bonds as effective as possible and help us bounce back. Once we are back above backing policy will turn bonds back on and emissions to cover dilution from them accordingly