463
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
|
on: February 08, 2014, 09:27:19 AM
|
The government (teacher told us) took the ladies to Fort Knox to show them that the gold was still there.
Must been in the '60, right? Because now it's definitely gone. Yes, I took that class in ~1973, and the story must have been old by then. The ladies must have been Soviet spies who promptly gave the exact location of the gold to the Soviet workmen who were waiting just below the basement.
|
|
|
464
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
|
on: February 08, 2014, 08:49:31 AM
|
Anyone recall off hand the figure of their Fincen fine (or whatever it was)? This sounds like the sort of thing Jorge would be good at Sorry to disappoint, I have no idea about that. But shouldn't people be worried that their last "Transparency Report" was posted in mid-2012? About my last hypothetical theory about how an hypothetical exchange could have stupidly lost 7/8 of its client's BTCs last November: any company of MtGOX's size has a financial manager, and their financial manager must have threatened to commit seppuku if the company would sit on a pile of BTC worth tens (hundreds?) of million US$ without trying to extract some revenue from it. If invested into something that pays 5% per year, 100 million US$ would yield 5 million US$ per year. Which company would pass on such an opportunity? One of the two things that I learned from my Economy classes in college was a story about some organization of old ladies claiming that the Soviets had tunneled from Russia through the basement of Fort Knox and stolen all the gold that was then backing the US dollar. The government (teacher told us) took the ladies to Fort Knox to show them that the gold was still there. Moral of the story was: to preserve public trust one must take even the most ridiculous rumors seriously, and show convincing evidence against them. As for hiring... it may be a sign that they are growing, or that they have fired key people, or that key people have left...
|
|
|
465
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
|
on: February 08, 2014, 12:49:07 AM
|
Friday Feb/07, what a day.
Volume surged on all exchanges. Even BTC-China traded ~18 kBTC, growing even as percentage of China's total.
Compared to Thursday, volume increased a bit less outside China than inside China. The Middle Kingdom had fallen to a bit less than 50% of total, today it was a bit more than 50%.
BitFinEx was the most active outside China, well ahead of MtGOX.
MTGox had ~49,460 BTC traded for USD, ~5600 BTC traded for EUR, ~2300 BTC traded for JPY.
|
|
|
466
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
|
on: February 08, 2014, 12:37:48 AM
|
Daily volumes of BTC trade to/from USD and other national currencies (in kBTC): ! Tue ! Wed ! Thu ! Fri ! Sat ! Sun ! Mon ! Tue ! Wed ! Thu ! Fri ! EXCHANGE ! 01/28 ! 01/29 ! 01/30 ! 01/31 ! 02/01 ! 02/02 ! 02/03 ! 02/04 ! 02/05 ! 02/06 ! 02/07 ! Currencies considered BitFinEx | 13.62 | 3.87 | 8.18 | 3.91 | 4.54 | 3.15 | 3.45 | 3.36 | 5.22 | 21.11 | 66.36 | USD MtGOX | 11.82 | 7.21 | 6.60 | 4.45 | 5.13 | 2.28 | 3.37 | 5.40 | 8.20 | 21.54 | 58.89 | USD,EUR,GBP,AUD,JPY Bitstamp | 20.04 | 7.04 | 13.13 | 7.73 | 8.30 | 4.07 | 4.93 | 7.59 | 8.48 | 20.65 | 42.79 | USD BTC-e | 16.82 | 6.53 | 12.54 | 4.65 | 6.30 | 4.74 | 5.75 | 4.51 | 6.55 | 9.72 | 31.84 | USD,EUR,RUR Bitcoin.DE | 0.49 | 0.33 | 0.47 | 0.35 | 0.33 | 0.35 | 0.51 | 0.27 | 0.31 | 0.61 | 1.30 | EUR Kraken | 0.54 | 0.24 | 0.37 | 0.20 | 0.23 | 0.15 | 0.21 | 0.29 | 0.23 | 0.59 | 1.45 | EUR CaVirtEx | 0.22 | 0.21 | 0.25 | 0.24 | 0.24 | 0.20 | 0.08 | 0.17 | 0.18 | 0.39 | 1.07 | CAD CampBX | 0.20 | 0.07 | 0.06 | 0.05 | 0.23 | 0.16 | 0.10 | 0.12 | 0.16 | 0.21 | 0.82 | USD Crypto-Trade | 0.01 | . | 0.01 | . | 0.01 | 0.01 | . | 0.01 | 0.01 | 0.04 | 0.05 | USD
SUBTOTAL | 63.76 | 25.50 | 41.61 | 21.58 | 25.31 | 15.11 | 18.40 | 21.72 | 29.34 | 74.86 | 204.57 |
Huobi | 92.88 | 32.14 | 29.27 | 15.26 | 28.86 | 26.27 | 24.77 | 18.65 | 19.55 | 39.97 | 131.91 | CNY OKCoin | 52.37 | 29.11 | 18.56 | 17.11 | 20.38 | 20.00 | 18.09 | 12.77 | 12.33 | 26.07 | 74.37 | CNY BTC-China | 6.45 | 1.94 | 1.99 | 1.17 | 2.31 | 2.21 | 1.70 | 1.33 | 1.54 | 4.09 | 17.66 | CNY (NOTE 1)
SUBTOTAL | 151.70 | 63.19 | 49.82 | 33.54 | 51.55 | 48.48 | 44.56 | 32.75 | 33.42 | 70.13 | 223.94 |
TOTAL | 215.46 | 88.69 | 91.43 | 55.12 | 76.86 | 63.59 | 62.96 | 54.47 | 62.76 | 144.99 | 428.51 |
All numbers were collected by hand from the site http://bitcoinwisdom.com. Beware of possible errors. For each exchange, the numbers include only the trade volume to/from the currencies listed in the rightmost column. Trade between BTC and other cryptocoins, such as LiteCoin, is NOT included. Coinbase is said to use Bitstamp for currency conversion. Dates on the header line are UTC. Specifically, "01/15" means "from 01/15 00:00:00 UTC to 01/15 23:59:59 UTC". (Beware that Bitcoinwisdom uses your local time, so the date may appear to be off by 1 day. For example, if you are 2 hours west of Greenwich, it may show "01/14 22:00" when the UTC time is "01/15 00:00".) (NOTE 1) On 2014-01-30, BTC-China had a burst of extremely fast, regular and atypical transactions, all with similar amounts (a few tens of BTC) and prices (~4836 CNY), adding up to about 41,050 BTC. The burst started suddenly around 17:00 UTC and and stopped suddenly around 19:30 UTC. Presumably those transactions were made by a faulty robot trading against itself or some other robot, and did not represent actual exchange of money and bitcoins between distinct individuals. Therefore those anomalous transactions were subtracted from the BTC-China volume for Jan/30.
|
|
|
468
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
|
on: February 07, 2014, 11:45:09 PM
|
The easiest explanation is that while BTC withdrawals were possible and fiat withdrawals not, people bought themselves out of gox by bying BTC. Thus, the higher price.
Perhaps... but they had a 10% premium at leat since Sep/2013 (I did not check earlier than that). Did they already have USD withdrawal problems back then?
|
|
|
470
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
|
on: February 07, 2014, 11:25:24 PM
|
Hm, from what I have been reading, I would think that MtGOX maintained that 10% premium over market price to (a) encourage people to deposit BTC there, and (b) discourage clients who had USD balance from converting it to BTC and moving these out.
Since they have now stopped all BTC withdrawals, pure and simple, those two reasons do not apply any more...
|
|
|
472
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: China Holiday Ended Yesterday. China wakes again in about 5 hours. Predictions?
|
on: February 07, 2014, 09:45:47 PM
|
To me, it is obvious that this mini-crash was started and driven mostly by China.
Just check the price and volume charts. The drop started at the same time in all exchanges, which happens to be Feb/07 07:00 06:00 am in China; and things calmed down again at the same time, which is about 02:30 01:30 am in China. There was a smaller drop yesterday, which started at 08:00 am sharp - China time.
Since the Nov/2013 rally, and probably since much earlier, the Chinese exchanges have been running the show and defining the Bitcoin price. BTC-China was the leader at first, but since mid-December it has practically died and Huobi and OKCoin have taken the lead. They usually account for 70% or more of the total volume at the exchanges monitored by the main charting sites.
Bitcoin price moves when the Chinese are trading; it stagnates when they go to bed, go on vacation, or are hung over from the previous night's party. Arbitrage trading, preumably by a small group of professional traders, must be spreading the price swings in China to all other exchanges. Traders outside China are then spurred by those price swings to react, at weird hours of the day.
My theory for the cause of this mini-crash is that the Chinese banks have re-opened after the Chinese New Year holidays (some on Feb/06, most today). That made it possible for the Chinese investors to again withdraw money from the exchanges. At that point, many of those who had become disillusioned with bitcoin during the week choose to dump and withdraw.
I don't think that the Apple ban had much impact on traders' mood, in China or elsewhere. Most bitcoin investors were attracted by the promise of quick huge profits, not by the long-term dream of electronic payments without banks. And the typical Chinese investor probably does not know or care about non-Chinese exchanges, Mt.GOX included.
|
|
|
473
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
|
on: February 07, 2014, 07:05:01 PM
|
Consider this plot of the BTC price at Huobi over the last 2.5 days: Note that the volume plot at bottom is roughly mirrored on the price plot, as deviations from the almost straight trend line (in blue). It is as if Huobi's clients wanted the price to be much lower, but are fighting against a "force" that wanted the price to follow that trendline. So the price falls while they are active, but springs back towards the trendline when they slow down for lunch or go to bed. What could be that mysterious force? It does not seem to be the bulk of traders at the non-Chinese exchanges, since their activity rises and falls in sync with Huobi's volume -- that is, on China's clock, rather than Canada's or Bulgaria's -- and they seem to be just following Huobi's price fluctuations.
|
|
|
474
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
|
on: February 07, 2014, 06:25:08 PM
|
My thoughts are we have seen the end of coins from Mt Gox. There will never be another coin that leaves because there aren't any left.
I think the real question is, how much does that matter? [...] What would that do to the price? As far as I'm concerned, the current rundown is already working under the assumption that any funds locked up in Gox are doomed. If "the oldest and once largest" Bitcoin exchange were to fold, hundreds if not thousands of people would probably lose tens of millions of dollars. That would be news in mainstream media, and it would make it even harder to sell Bitcoin as a solid investment. Without new investors, the price will not rise. So the efects on the price would not be immediate, but would be spread out over the coming months. Actually, my guess is that the current mini-crash was not caused or influenced by Mt.GOX's possible demise, nor by the Apple and Russia news. Mt.GOX means nothing to the Chinese, and non-Chinese traders have grown immune to bad news, it seems. I still think that it was the opening of banks in China that caused it.
|
|
|
475
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
|
on: February 07, 2014, 06:07:44 PM
|
It's 3:00 am in China but a few bears and bulls are still fiercely fighting at Huobi.
For a couple of hours it looked as if they would make a truce at 4600 CNY, but then a bull trespassed and fighting resumed over the nextt 100 CNY. Outcome is still uncertain.
Bulls have on their side a pesky robot that makes a 0.01 BTC transaction at the top of the spread whenever someone clears the road down by dumping a few dozen coins. Not fair.
Methinks people should pay more attention to Huobi. In spite of all robots, I think that their price plots and transaction logs look more "natural" than those of the non-China exchanges. To me, it looks like the latter are trying to follow Huobi, but often over-react to its moves.
|
|
|
476
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
|
on: February 07, 2014, 05:17:40 PM
|
Let me know if you find this useful. If so I will keep it available if not, also fine.
Nice chart, thanks! (Except that the colors of the lines are too similar, it is hard to tell which is which.) May I ask how you got the Huobi price data? (I have been downloading from bitcoincharts.com but they omit Huobi and OKCoin)
|
|
|
478
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
|
on: February 07, 2014, 12:36:58 PM
|
What are ya'll feeling about Huobi staying 20-30 higher then the western exchange..
The "Huobi USD price" you see on chart sites is computed by them using the official exchange rate (6.06 CNY = 1 USD), Actually there is no BTC/USD trading at the Chinese sites. I suppose that the effective exchage rate (assumed by arbitragers) is somewhat less than 6.06. That would explain the apparent difference.
|
|
|
480
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
|
on: February 07, 2014, 10:44:11 AM
|
"Dear clients, we sincerely apologize for your frustration, but for the last two months we have been having technical problems with our outgoing mail. We tried to stick the envelope with your check into the mailbox but we missed the opening. We concluded that having more than one envelope to mail was too much for our brain, so we gave up and tore up all the checks. But we still owe you."
|
|
|
|