The value of all bitcoins, also called the market capitalization, is $5.1 billion. This number the total number of coins, 12.6 million coins, multiplied by the price, $407 per coin. To put this into perspective, Apple is valued at $570 billion which is more than 100 times more than bitcoin. Google is worth $380 billion, Facebook is at $180 billion, eBay is at $72 billion, and Coca-Cola is at $170 billion. Actually, this is a bit like comparing bananas and apples. Stock companies have value since a stock is a claim on the company’s profit. If you buy a stock, you’d normally do so only if you believe the present value of all future dividends is higher than the share price. Bitcoin pays no dividends, hence from this perspective it has no value. Gold and silver have more in common with bitcoin. All serve as storage of wealth, pay no dividends, and can potentially be used as money. All the gold in the world is worth about $7,000 billion. All silver ever mined is “only” worth $920 billion, but about half of it has been lost. Silver is not only precious, it is also an industrial metal. Much waste containing silver has never been recycled and is forever lost. Other interesting numbers are the new mine supplies of gold, silver and bitcoin. As you may know, about every ten minutes 25 new bitcoins are minted. Over a day that is $1.5 million worth of new coins. In 2014 this causes an inflation of 10% of the money supply, but this number decreases every year. Gold’s annual mine supply is 2.800 tonnes (90 million troy ounces) worth $330 million a day. Silver’s mine supply is 790 million troy ounces valued at $44 million a day. To summarize: • The market cap of bitcoin is less than one hundredth those of silver and large companies, and less than one thousandth that of gold. • The value of mined bitcoins is about one two-hundredth that of gold and one thirtieth that of silver. The price of bitcoin was $407, Gold was $1321, and Silver was $20.21 at the moment of writing.