Interest is not declining, its that there are not enough new participants with enough new money to hold up the prices.
you people don't get the spin on inflation, do you?
It doesn't matter how much money you pump in, it will always bleed out again.
You'll loose the same percentage
no matter what the marketcap is. Only difference: the
higher the marketcap the bigger the total losses in Dollar.
So smart money does stay away from longterm investing for now.
Of course average Joe is not interested in holding a coin that performs this bad for so long.
Maybe people would like to use it as a payment system and that's fine but holding large amounts of it for long time doesn't make 100% sense yet if you don't plan to invest for decades.
So in its current form it's just a payment system you can use but
it is not a hedge against inflation, a savings tool or store of value in its current form.
So people don't want to hold it because it actually is no store of value or at least not a better one than the USD is.
These speculation bubbles will keep being depressed by the inflation as long as it lasts. Losses to inflation are just higher with a higher cap so actually not even the richest people can afford to pump it.
Bottom line: nobody can afford inflation and the negative feedbackloop it creates has fatal potential (we are in it for many months now - just hope we don't see more large selloffs until the halving). I do see real potential there for a total failure of bitcoin (the unthinkable)
Yes people are interested in the tech and would want to adopt but can't because it doesn't hold value. It is just bleeding and bleeding and bleeding.
Maybe demand picks up for this or that reason but then it just continues to bleed out on all the new investors.
I see most people aren't even able to wrap their head around the issue with that inflation.
The inflation is what makes it very volatile too. So lower inflation would also be the solution to the volatility problem (not my problem but that of merchants)