Author: jawor , Crypto KOL
Compiled by: Felix, PANews
“The human brain is hardwired to tell stories. The economy is based on human decision-making.” —Robert J. Shiller (American economist, Nobel Prize winner in economics)
In December 2017, something strange happened. Friends who had never cared about the crypto market started asking how to buy Bitcoin. It wasn’t because they had read the whitepaper or even understood what blockchain was. They had just heard a story about someone they knew making life-changing money.
That's enough.
Cryptocurrencies are fertile ground for what Nobel Prize-winning economist Robert J. Shiller calls narrative economics: contagious narratives that influence market behavior as much as or more than traditional macro factors like interest rates or GDP.
Retail investors have changed the rules of the game. In traditional finance, capital typically flows through structured channels: fund managers, analysts, investor reports. Now, capital flows through memes, viral posts, and premium Telegram groups. Narratives have become the new fundamentals. And nowhere is this more evident than in crypto.
When markets heat up, narrative becomes the most important factor in capital allocation. Not white papers, not balance sheets, but conviction.
The core argument is this: crypto market volatility is not based on technology, user growth, or revenue (at least not early on). It is based on belief, and belief is built on a compelling story.
Robert Shiller believes that economic narratives spread like viruses. The most powerful narratives are not necessarily true - they are just contagious. They appeal to emotions, identity, and FOMO. In the field of cryptocurrency, this spread is instant, global, and amplified by algorithms.
A typical narrative usually starts with a seed idea: Bitcoin is digital gold. Ethereum is the world computer. DeFi is the new banking system. These ideas are simple, intuitive, and emotionally appealing. Once such a narrative catches on, it begins to reshape people’s values.
The lifecycle of a strong crypto narrative generally follows this trajectory:
People often talk about network effects in the context of technology. But narratives themselves have network effects. The more people believe in a story, the more true it becomes: socially, economically, and ultimately financially.
There are two key elements that make a narrative powerful:
Ultimately, in crypto, narrative is not an additional layer on top of the product. The narrative is the product.
Bitcoin: Digital Gold
Bitcoin itself didn’t change in 2020. What changed was how people thought about it. The mainstream narrative shifted from “peer-to-peer cash” to “digital gold.” Suddenly, Bitcoin was positioned as a hedge against inflation, a safe haven in an age of money printing. It wasn’t the technology that attracted MicroStrategy or Tesla, it was the idea.
The mysterious legend of Satoshi Nakamoto also helps. The vanished founder makes the story more compelling. This is more than just code — it’s a movement.
Ethereum: The World Computer
There were almost no working dApps when Ethereum launched. But the idea — a decentralized platform where anyone could build unstoppable applications — was extremely appealing. The saying “code is law” took hold. The market wasn’t buying actual usage, it was buying potential.
Ethereum becomes valuable not because of its status quo, but because of its promise.
The DeFi Summer of 2020
During the DeFi summer, yields were ridiculously high. But the core driver was not the annual percentage rate (APR), but the narrative: permissionless finance, be your own bank, financial primitives not restricted by banks or borders. The idea spread quickly. Most protocols had little revenue, few users, and flawed token economics - but it didn't matter. The narrative itself was enough to override reality.
NFT as cultural ownership
Why would anyone pay millions for a JPEG? Because NFTs aren’t about the image itself—they’re about identity. The narrative is simple and seductive: digital ownership will redefine art, music, and status. Owning a Bored Ape isn’t about aesthetics, it’s about identity.
The narrative itself is more important than the product. That’s why it works.
AI Tokens in 2023-2024
Some projects with poor product features and zero revenue have soared just because of the phrase "AI + cryptocurrency = the future". The AI concept, which has long been popular in traditional finance (TradFi), has now spread to the cryptocurrency field and brought a lot of speculative capital. Practicality is not important, narrative is the key.
The meme token with the word "agent" in its name has skyrocketed 10 times. Founders have added "AI" to their roadmaps. Investors are optimistic about its potential, even if it is just talk at the moment.
Cryptocurrencies lack traditional valuation benchmarks: no balance sheets, no price-to-earnings ratios, no regulatory filings. This makes the space particularly susceptible to being driven by narratives rather than fundamentals.
also:
These factors create the perfect petri dish for narrative-driven price action. In other markets, narratives are merely epiphenomenon. In crypto, they are the driving force.
The price of cryptocurrencies is not based on the present situation, but on the possible future.
In narrative-driven markets, advantage comes from early identification.
Smart traders and funds don’t just analyze charts or read tickers. They look at the social level: who is tweeting, what is the density of memes, is there emotional engagement, and is the narrative moving from niche to mainstream?
Here are some popular narratives:
Each narrative follows the same life cycle:
Timing is critical. If you enter during stage 2 and exit before stage 4, you are riding the wave. Miss the cycle and you are left with the “baggage” of the narrative.
Of course you can. In fact, narrative is one of the few reasonable frameworks for early-stage cryptocurrency investing.
Robert Shiller makes a compelling point: to ignore narrative is to ignore macro forces. In the crypto space, this is amplified. Narratives don’t just reflect markets, they create them.
As cryptocurrencies move closer to traditional finance, some of the noise may subside. But the space will always attract speculators, dreamers, and builders who value vision over metrics.
In crypto, the most successful people are not always the best engineers, but the ones who are best at reading market sentiment.
So keep an eye on narratives, keep an eye on community dynamics (CT), and follow the latest trends. Narratives may not be coded, but written.
If crypto is one big narrative, perhaps the best traders are those who read a few chapters ahead.
Related reading: The new version of “Altcoin Season”: Farewell to general rise, narratives such as ETFs, real returns and institutional adoption will trigger a “selective bull market”