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Economy / Speculation / Re: SecondMarket Bitcoin Investment Trust Observer
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on: January 14, 2015, 05:46:10 PM
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OK, sorry, I did not mean that. The point is that the money that went into SM will not come out again. Wouldn't it be like this project of mine? Oh. I fully expect the money I put in through SM will indeed come out again someday. Your "project" is clearly fraud and not like Bitcoin or SM at all. Well, I suppose SM or even Bitcoin could turn out to be frauds but so far I doubt it. Do you have evidence that either are indeed frauds? Never said they are frauds. Unlike my "plan", I am sure that everything was clearly spelled out in the prospectus, and investors were fully aware of the risks.
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26
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Economy / Speculation / Re: SecondMarket Bitcoin Investment Trust Observer
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on: January 14, 2015, 04:46:33 PM
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That means, there will be no redemptions: investors will have to find other investors in order to cash out. Correct?
Well, I won't have to find another investor to buy my position; rather, I just order my investment converted into the ETF (trivial, might even be automatic) and then trade it just like any other ETF. Naturally there must be buyers of the ETF in order to make a deals but I don't have to find them myself. OK, sorry, I did not mean that. The point is that the money that went into SM will not come out again. Wouldn't it be like this project of mine?
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28
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Economy / Speculation / Re: SecondMarket Bitcoin Investment Trust Observer
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on: January 14, 2015, 04:31:49 PM
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Is there a set date for SMBIT to re-enable redemptions?
When I last spoke with the SecondMarket folks they indicated redemptions will be through the ETF, so, no, no specific date is known yet. That means, there will be no redemptions: investors will have to find other investors in order to cash out. Correct?
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29
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Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Miners are killing bitcoin
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on: January 14, 2015, 04:16:20 PM
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Payment Proccessors dont sell their coins on the major exchanges, they sell them OTC
Well, BitPay sells a lot through exchanges like Bitstamp and Kraken: http://www.walletexplorer.com/wallet/BitPay.com 2015-01-12 21:21:37 -500. Kraken.com 2015-01-12 21:12:22 -500. unidentified wallet [44eaace4eb] 2015-01-07 19:14:24 -900. Unidentified wallet [00a5eacf79] 2015-01-06 03:18:47 -300. Kraken.com 2015-01-06 03:18:47 -1000. Unidentified wallet [44eaace4eb] 2015-01-05 16:21:19 -500. Unidentified wallet [44eaace4eb] 2015-01-05 16:21:19 -200. Kraken.com
If you keep scrolling those pages you will see similar payments to Bitstamp (before the hack). I haven't looked into the Coinbase wallet (available at the same site). where they could sell at a premium relative to the market price! Have you guys ever seen the listings for high-volume buyers? They would buy thousands at a time and not even flinch.
That [44eaace4eb] wallet may be some private whale, but may also be some part of an exchange's input wallet that the site has not yet identified as such. If the OTC market price was higher than the exchanges, then why would they sell at the exchanges at all? For lots of 500 and 1000 BTC, the OTC price cannot be much different than the open market price, since a broker could easily buy or sell that amount in the exchanges and make a lot of money from arbitrage in the OTC market.
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31
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Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
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on: January 14, 2015, 03:13:23 PM
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What's the most bullish thing imaginable? I would like some brainstorming please.
The US government announces plans to buy 25 million bitcoins over the next 3 months. It sounds like they should read the white paper first :/ I bet that 25 million bitcoins would be promptly made available for the occasion, with the full blessing of Patriarch Gavin.
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33
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Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
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on: January 14, 2015, 02:55:28 PM
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during the next bubble when the Chinese Govt and the PBoC starts up again with more threats of banning and other such nonsense.
Actually I did not come across right in my posting. I believe that the Chinese government may care about what is going on inside the exchanges, and may still crush them harder, if it turns out that they have been grossly scamming their clients, or if they try to do that in the future. Like that exchange that went poof a year or so ago, whose owners were chased down and jailed. For that to happen, I belive that several rich clients would have to lose lots of money at once. Or the exchanges try to cheat the government about taxes, money laundering, etc. However, if the exchanges are "only" slowly bleeding the small clients, by front-running, manipulating the price for pump-and-dump rides, or faking their numbers, I don't think that the government will care.
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36
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Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Miners are killing bitcoin
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on: January 14, 2015, 02:36:57 PM
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Merchants themselves could give a damn about bitcoin in its premise...as all they do is cash out to fiat and dump it on the market the second they receive payment.
They don't do that, actually. When they sell a 100$ item 'paid with bitcoin', they just get 100 dollars in their bank account. That is why it is so easy to convince them to 'accept bitcoin'. It is the payment processor's job to handle the bitcoin and convert it to dollars. Bitpay and Coinbase must have been running into huge losses with the recent price drops: they must accept bitcoins as if they were worth the current market price, but can only sell them hours later on Bitstamp.
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38
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Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
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on: January 14, 2015, 02:14:17 PM
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BTW anyone else suspecting the Chinese exchanges to be almost completely fake? There was just dump, flatline, dump, flatline. The volume was also completely ludicrous.
PBOC should have shut them down a long time ago. Since the Nov/2013 bubble I saw only two articles where the reporter actually bothered to find out who were the Chinese who created it by buying all those coins. Not in the bitcoin media, of course. (The most informative one was in the Christian Science Monitor, of all places.) The Chinese who have been setting the price of bitcoin were day-trading funny commodities before, as a form of gambling. They just moved to a new asset that was a lot more volatile, and did not have complicating isssues like quality grades, location, shelf time, etc. (all hail to 'fungibility'). So, my guess is that the Chinese government does not care anymore about what happens on the exchanges, because it is no different than what was happening before bitcoin, with the speculation in those commodities. The PBoC does not care any more, because bitcoin trading is confined to the exchanges, and cannot interfere with the role of the yuan in e-commece and with the banking and financial sectors -- which is what they care about. Some other parts of the government were concerned with criminal use of bitcoin, but the exchanges got scared into fully cooperating with the police through AML/KYC. I believe that they also got a scolding from some other sector of the government about their attempts to market bitcoin to the masses, so they pulled back on that too -- no more sponsoring of bitcoin conferences, and no more open houses featuring the Bitcoin Goddess. In short, the Chinese government must now be worried about the fairness of bitcoin exchanges to the same degree that they worry about the fairness of the casino tables in Macau. That is, not at all.
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39
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Economy / Speculation / Re: SecondMarket Bitcoin Investment Trust Observer
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on: January 14, 2015, 08:02:54 AM
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I bought through SecondMarket around $700 and I'm delighted to stay the course. I wouldn't have sold even if I could have.
Good for you then. But I am thinking of those SMBIT investors who wanted to redeem after the lock-up. Thank Goddess they had a benevolent Authority to protect them from their own weaknesses. But no problem, I am sure that, if and when SMBIT again allows redemptions, they will offer to redeem the shares according to the price on 2014-10-28 (355 USD/BTC).
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