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Cole Perkins
@coleperkins
Swaps by the Numbers. We looked at swaps that occurred over the past 80 days (excluding noggs farmers) Here is what we are seeing: * Total Swaps: 22 * Via $Nouns: 16 * Via Treasury Swap Proposals: 3 * Via Pending Treasury swaps: 3 Of these * Purchased at Auction: 19 * Purchased on Secondary Market: 2 * Via Governance: 1 12 of swaps were created less than 8 days after the noun was acquired. Do swaps help drive demand to purchase Nouns?
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krel
@krel
appreciate all you do but find the narrative inflated
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Cole Perkins
@coleperkins
What’s inflated? Data is right there.
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krel
@krel
data tells you whatever you wanna see
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krel
@krel
If i restate the findings: Data shows that when people purchase a noun they also often choose to swap into something else. There is no/little data pointing to the swap as the driving factor of intent to purchase, but it also cant be ruled out. What we can say is that when people purchase a noun, they also like to swap. (Imo this is good — no need to push the narrative further)
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Spencer Perkins
@spencerperkins.eth
There was a never a claim that swaps were THE driving factor, instead there is a leading question on if swaps HELP drive demand. Data shows purchase with intent to swap at least 8 times (swap <1 day after purchase). While it’s possible, it is HIGHLY unlikely the ability to swap didn’t play a role in any of these purchases. That said, we will talk to users and confirm!
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