I mean, the obvious answer is regulatory.
if a market is highly regulated and it's difficult for US dollars to move in and out then the friction will naturally cause those dollars to seek a different market.
theres available supply etc.
maturation, do you need to lock up US dollars for a specific time period?
information asymmetry, certain assets are understood better and therefore favored by USD investors.
and there are definitely memetic drives where recent successes are favored regardless of underlying value prop
All markets are different. I don't think treating them as universally equivalent is accurate. these issues are mostly, but not necessarily, unique to the fact that it's US dollars moving around.
if they were priced in something else and it was a different asset moving, then there would be a *different structural context.*
anyway that's what i mean by "USD favors"
thanks for helping me think it through.
and it's related but actually a different conversation, not only are the markets different vis-a-vis USD but I think that treating US dollars once they enter a market as if they were fungible with US dollars in another market is probably a misunderstanding. they may still be called "USD," but they actually behave as a different asset and I'm not sure comparing them to each other is accurate.
but let's just leave that there for now okay? ๐
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Will reread and ponder, but this clip I just fumbled my way through making will surely interest you. Check it out!
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Rereading I see more what you mean. Simple example, USD dislikes crypto. It takes some doing to buy crypto, you can't just click a button on bank, nor buy it on E*Trade. You have to make a new account on a crypto exchange, yada yada, and then your bank is likely to interfere when they detect "suspicious activity" or the like. So that friction is enough for a lot of people who might dabble to steer clear. At least that was the case prior to ETFs. And back further you had to go to send money to shady Japanese exchange to buy BTC on mtgox (huge friction, and partly why I am not swimming in bitcoins today, as I saw that back in the day and was like "ooohh, that looks shady, no thank you").
The clip I posted minutes ago should interest you. Highlights how currencies and property rights are all smooth and background oiled machines...until they're not.