This is true but confuses people because obviously miners must commit capital 
to mining before any block space can exist to have value. The reason for the 
misunderstanding is that miners don’t simply respond, they anticipate. All 
production, and therefore capital investment, is the result of anticipation of 
future returns, not an attempt to chase past returns.

The first miner anticipated that the then-worthless “tokens” he was mining 
would have a future value. Turns out he was right. Others have been wrong, 
which is the nature of betting on future prices. But if nobody does it, there 
are no products.

e

> On Jan 22, 2018, at 11:59, Mark Friedenbach via bitcoin-dev 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
>> On Jan 22, 2018, at 11:01 AM, Ilan Oh via bitcoin-dev 
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> The chain with the most mining power will tend to have more value.
> 
> I believe you have the causality on that backwards. The tokens which are 
> worth more value will attract more mining hash rate. Miners respond to 
> cash-out value, they don’t set it.
> 
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