Why won't the maximum supply of the USUAL be a problem in the future?!
By the end of this year, we will have approximately 500 million coins of the USUAL already available for purchase. At this time, while the USUAL continues to issue coins, the drops are much more pronounced than they will be in the future.
Doing some basic math, imagine that you have a company, and that company had 60 million shares available on the market, at one real each. If the company decided to increase the number of shares, going to 75 million, what would happen?
Since the value of the company did not increase, but rather the number of shares of your company, its value would be divided by the new number of shares, with each share falling by 25%, since we are accommodating another 15 million coins.
If later the shares returned to one real and you decided to place another 15 million shares of your company, how much would the drop be?!
20%!
What does all this story have to do with USUAL?
Little by little, more USUAL tokens are being released, which, as I explained, causes the value of the currency to fall. The percentage of the fall may be relevant at this point, since the amount of coins in circulation is not very high, but as the market stabilizes with more coins, the falls become smaller and smaller, giving room for growth.
Considering the revenue target of the USUAL protocol, I will not be giving up on this currency any time soon. I trust the project and I see that everything indicates growth.
$USUAL