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Litecoin vs. Ethereum

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When it comes to investing in cryptocurrencies, nothing is a sure thing. If the past few years’ significant booms and busts told us anything, it’s that you can expect volatility, wherever you go. That said, diversifying your crypto-portfolio is a wise move. Although Bitcoin often drags everything up and down with it, some tokens do things better than others.

But which alternative currencies should you consider investing in? We have our favorites, but if you want to put your eggs into one specific basket, you need to look at the differences between some of the best options. What about if we pit Litecoin against Ethereum — which one comes out on top?

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Litecoin has been around a lot longer than Ethereum, but Ether has grown in value far quicker. Then there are smart contracts to consider. In this guide, we’ll break down the key differences between these two altcoins, to give you the best basis for your choice of cryptocurrency investment. However, it should be noted that the information that Digital Trends provides should not be considered as financial advice, and we cannot be held responsible for market forces and other unforeseen developments.

If you’d rather skip all that and just look at how to buy Ethereum or trade your coins for something else, we have guides for that too.

As a store of value

With all the furor surrounding Bitcoin and its contemporaries’ massive value spike throughout — and particularly at the end — of 2017, one of the biggest concerns for those looking to buy cryptocurrency is whether they’ll retain their value. The short answer to that is nobody knows. Cryptocurrencies are incredibly volatile and can rise and crash tens of percentage points in a single day, but some are proven more than others and may provide more stable investments for the future.

Debuting in 2011, Litecoin is one of the oldest cryptocurrencies, so it has one of the best records for retaining or increasing in value. It also has strong name recognition, which with many hundreds of alternative cryptocurrencies out there, is a critical facet in and of itself. Many exchanges now support Litecoin, which makes buying and selling it more comfortable and help it store value long-term.

Ethereum is not as old as Litecoin — it only came into existence in 2015 — but it’s quickly garnered interest for its potential uses beyond cryptocurrencies, which we’ll address in more detail later in this guide.

That interest has increased Ethereum’s name recognition. It’s separate enough from the “coin” terminology that it can strike out on its own a little easier, and it’s seeing growing support from exchanges. It’s still not common to see Ether used as a payment method, but that is steadily increasing too.

Other factors worth considering in this debate are that Litecoin has a definitive 84 million token maximum, meaning that eventually, there will be no new Litecoin created. On the other hand, both altcoins will continue to be awarded for mining into the foreseeable future. The developers could cap the awards someday, but that has yet to happen. The scarcity brought about by a limitation on the number of tokens could mean that Litecoin ends up being a more valuable cryptocurrency in the future.

For now, Ethereum seems likely to be the best store of value. It has a much higher and growing interest from the wider cryptocurrency community. Despite its younger age, its growing name recognition and availability should drive it forward, making it easier to purchase, access, and spend. Ethereum would most likely disappear if cryptocurrencies as a whole went kaput, but would otherwise be alright.

As a transaction medium

The main reason cryptocurrencies came to exist, at least initially, was as a form of entirely decentralized digital money. That means using it to buy goods and services. As we’ve seen with Bitcoin, scaling difficulties can make that far harder to achieve, especially if you aren’t willing to pay huge fees. So how do Litecoin and Ethereum compare in that respect?

Considering Litecoin was created to be a better online transactional medium than Bitcoin, it’s no surprise that it’s pretty good at it. At the time of writing, its median transaction fee is just $0.0008 with a block time average of 2:22 (minutes/seconds). Confirmations come pretty quick, around four times faster than Bitcoin.

That makes Litecoin great for conducting transactions online, especially considering the growing number of online outlets that accept it. Ethereum is equally viable, however. Although its average fees are much higher — its median rate is around $0.25 — the Ethereum block time is under 14 seconds. You can expect your transfers to receive multiple confirmations in a minute or less.

That’s why over the past year, we’re seen Ethereum become the most traded cryptocurrency in the world, with more than a million transactions taking place some days. In comparison, Litecoin handles just over 30,000 transactions a day, and while even Bitcoin handles 300,000 or so,  Ethereum is trading hands with incredible frequency at almost 1,000,000 daily.

Both Litecoin and Ethereum have their strengths in transactions. While Litecoin is the cheaper of the two to spend online, owners appear to be more interested in using Ether for the time being. Its short block time is hard to beat.

Beyond cryptocurrencies

While Litecoin is a cryptocurrency through and through, Ethereum is a little smarter than that. Ethereum itself is more than the Ether token. It’s also a platform that can facilitate Ether transactions in its own right. These are called “smart contracts.”

We go into more detail on smart contracts in our discussion of Ethereum, but in short, blockchain technology underpins a smart contact to engender trust. Instead of lawyers confirming a commitment has been adhered to, the blockchain does it automatically. The contracts can tell when goods or services have been transferred, and Ether payments are then automatically sent.

It’s a pie in the sky idea, but smart contracts could theoretically eliminate all sorts of intermediaries. For example, the use of smart contracts that send funds when milestones are reached would make crowdfunding services redundant. Likewise, real estate sellers could send purchase funds to financial institutions once the new owners have completed their end of the bargain.

Litecoin has no such goals, and that’s fine, but it does mean it’s decidedly less functional than its younger sibling. Ethereum is the natural evolution of the decentralizing idea of cryptocurrencies that began with Bitcoin. Litecoin is more of an iteration on that initial idea.

So which is best?

As with all cryptocurrency head-to-heads, naming one a champion over the other is hard. There are no guarantees in any of them, and one could crash and burn tomorrow while another soars in value. That said, we do have our favorites, and as it stands, Ethereum is the more functional, the more versatile, and the more technically impressive of these two cryptocurrencies.

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale covers how to guides, best-of lists, and explainers to help everyone understand the hottest new hardware and…
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