1161
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Economy / Speculation / Re: Predict the price of Bitcoin on 1 April 2015 - win CGB's
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on: April 01, 2015, 01:53:37 PM
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No, there is fun enough already in the contest result. I was serious. When analyzing prices of stocks, currencies, gold, etc, it is best to use a log scale because it turns equal relative changes into equal displacements. For example, a change from 100 to 200 will look just as big as a change from 1000 to 2000 (both being 2x). Also, a drop from 100 to 50 looks just as big as a rise from 100 to 200 (one is the inverse of the other). In that sense, 417 is closer to 240 than 135, because 417/240 = 1.73 is less than 240/135 = 1.77.
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1163
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Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
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on: April 01, 2015, 11:38:08 AM
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Do they keep the Btc? Or they'll dump the btc on us Rakuten uses Bitnet (a Bitpay competitor) to process Bitcoin payments. Meaning that the customer who opts for that payment method gets redirected to a Bitnet page that displays the total USD price converted to BTC. The customer sends his BTC to Bitnet, then Bitnet sends dollars to Rakuten USA's bank account. Eventually Bitnet sells the BTC somewhere to replenish their dollar reserves. hence you're promoting them Smart guy there. Actually it also has the benefit of burning a few million dollars of Bitnet's capital to subsidize the dumping.
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1167
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Economy / Speculation / Re: SecondMarket Bitcoin Investment Trust Observer
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on: March 31, 2015, 09:04:58 PM
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Still no selling? Share holders not willing to sell any... even at that premium! I would expect few would sell at those high bids and buy back again lower as "investors".
I suppose that the old investors are still waiting for their digital certificates or whatever they need in order to put their shares for sale. I still got no reply for my second attempt to ask the OTCQX help desk about the unit of "size". As noted before, the average BIT investor has lost, on paper, about 40% of the money he invested. Some investors made a profit, some are roughly even, but some lost a lot more than 40%. I would be very surprised if none of those old investors chooses to sell now. The difference is 3128 BTC or less than 2.5%. Could it be the effect of fees?
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1169
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Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
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on: March 31, 2015, 01:47:11 PM
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What can I reply? Bitcoin is working for some people, sure. Will it ever grow to a significant slice of the economy? Unfortunately, we have no idea of how many merchants (like you) really accept bitcoin, nor how much do they take by that route. That, by the way, is one thing that must be keeping serious investors away: there is practically no meaningful data on the state of the bitcoin economy. We must do with indirect hints. Right now there there seem to be, worldwide, at most 200'000 merchants who "accept bitcoin" in the sense that they accept national currency from a bitcoin payment processor like BitPay. BitPay seems to be processing about 1 million dollars of payments per day, but a large fraction of that seems to be miners paying bills. There seem to be less than 700'000 people who own a significant amount of bitcoin. Considering that, for a merchant, really accepting bitcoin is more complicated than signing up with BitPay, and that not every bitcoin owner uses it for purchases, I would think that the real bitcoin economy (excluding illegal trade) is still very small. And we have no ideal of whether it is growing or shrinking. Amounts of 30-50 dollars per purchase are fairly common in e-commerce using traditional means of payment. Why do you say that they would be uneconomical in your case? I wonder how much you would make if you also accepted payment through PayPal or some similat service. Have you considered it?
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1170
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Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
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on: March 31, 2015, 12:56:27 PM
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Even at replacing 1% of Gold, it'd be 70bn marketcap. And chances of that are severely over 5%. Actually it's a pretty good bet that it'll happen, but people in countries with hard currencies cannot really understand why that will be.
For example, having the 'security' of USD or EUR (=being American or European), you tend to see BTC as irrelevant, while if your national currency is junk, you value BTC just as you would value hard-to-find-assets like gold and hard currencies. It's a concept that is very elusive to western minds / developed countries.
Even the apparent "stability" and boredom that makes traders cringe for the 250$ mark, may be a +20% gain for someone living in a country where their national currency is on a declining curve during the last months.
Except that, to someone who has no ideological motivations and merely looks at the price charts, BTC looks worse than the Argentinean peso or Russian rubles. No one will consider BTC an option to escape inflation until those crazy sudden swings stop and the price remains stable for a year. As for replacing gold: with a 30% loss over the last few years, gold does not look like the solid refuge that it once was. Still, it has a fairly high rock-bottom price, maybe 100-200 $/ounce, due to its assured continuing demand for jewelry and industrial use, as well as his historical glamour. So, the price of gold is unlikely to drop by another 50% in the next few years, and any further drop will be gradual enough for individuals to take their money out before losing too much. In contrast, bitcoin does not have such floor. Even the 5 $/BTC estimated for e-payment usage depends on it continuing to to be the main cryptocurrency for that use, which is not at all certain. Bircoin price drops have been sudden and totally unpredictable, so investors would probably have to bear higher losses when trying to run away from them. Anyway, for everyone who has heard of bitcoin and still has money to invest, the expected value is now less than 245 $/BTC. They obviously think that the chances for Buterin's scenario are less than 1% (even if they don't make that estimation explicilt or conscious).
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1171
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Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
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on: March 31, 2015, 12:28:47 PM
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There is no currency conversion cost when the demand for USD is greater than the demand for local currency (which is most common). The other trader eats that cost. happily. It's true that exchanging that large of an amount is problematic, so what is much more likely is that I'd exchange a smaller amount and get a discount on my vacation rather than a free trip. It's still a good deal, all things else being equal.
That may be a good deal for you, but bitcoiner tourists doing that will not be enough to support a "rebittance" business. Moreover, their business will depress only the BTC:PHP price in the local market and exchanges, not the BTC:USD price. Local arbitragers could buy cheap BTC with PHP and re-sell them locally (or to tourists) for USD, at a higher price; but they too will need to change the USD into PHP for continuing operation, which again runs into the conversion fee barrier.
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1172
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Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
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on: March 31, 2015, 08:12:21 AM
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That is a general problem with bitcoin-based remittance: in order to sustain the local price, there must be a return channel that buys bitcoins at the destination country, with local currency, and sells them back at the exchanges for USD. Arbitragers could do that, profiting from the spread between the depressed local price an the USD market; but they would soon need to convert the USD that they get at the exchanges back into the local currency. But if the arbitragers have a way to do that and still make a profit, then a remittance service could use the same way, and undercut the bitcoin-based service...
There would be an incentive for people like me to take a Philippine vacation and buy enough BTC at locally depressed prices to pay for the trip! I may yet do that if conditions arise. You mean, doing arbitrage by physical transfer. If your trip costs 2500 USD, and the local market price is 5% lower than the USD market, you would need to buy and sell ~50'000 USD worth of bitcoin to pay for the trip. To do that you would have to exchange those 50'000 USD to PHP in the US and take the PHP with you, or take the USD and exchange them locally for PHP. Either way, apart from the cost of the trip, that currency conversion will cost you more than what it would cost for a traditional remittance service; so it would not solve the "rebittance" problem.
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1173
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Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
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on: March 31, 2015, 07:34:09 AM
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People who remit bitcoin from the US /UK or Canada would buy BTC at the prevailing market rates at the ATM (I assume this, maybe use one of the major exchanges as a benchmark), the moment they remit this money in BTC to folks in India or Asian countries, we do not have an atm / money exchanger who would immediately convert BTC to Fiat. Hence we put the coins up on LocalBitcoins AT A PREMIUM to market rates.
There is already a bitcoin-based remittance service for the Philippines: The sender gives them USD in the US, they use the USD to buy bitcoins at the exchanges, then sell the bitcoins in the Philippines for PHP, and give the PHP to the receiver. Not long ago they posted to /r/bitcoin calling for help, because they had run out of OTC buyers in the Philippines, and they could only sell them on the local open market BELOW the equivalent of the USD market price, hence at a loss. That is a general problem with bitcoin-based remittance: in order to sustain the local price, there must be a return channel that buys bitcoins at the destination country, with local currency, and sells them back at the exchanges for USD. Arbitragers could do that, profiting from the spread between the depressed local price an the USD market; but they would soon need to convert the USD that they get at the exchanges back into the local currency. But if the arbitragers have a way to do that and still make a profit, then a remittance service could use the same way, and undercut the bitcoin-based service...
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1174
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Other / Off-topic / Re: Answer the question above with a question.
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on: March 31, 2015, 01:31:34 AM
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Why shouldn't I care about it?
Are you talking about one special mountain? Why would you wanna talk about mountains at all? Have you read Sigmund Freud's theory about mountains and cliffs which are symbols of the male organ ? Is it worth reading once I complete the "Smell the Valleys" tome? I dont know there is such book, did you know that valley is a common feminine dream-symbol ? I know it is a dream symbol, do you know what kind of symbol? Should we keep dreaming? So, does it mean you did ever have this kind of dream ? how do you feel ? Are you Sigmund Freud reincarnated? "Dear Dr. Freud: Do you still consider me fuckin' nuts for wanting to fuck my table when I witness questions being questioned outta order?" Did you know that, according to Dalí himself, the only difference between him and a crazy man was that he was not crazy? Did you know that you;re one hell of a crazy person too ? In regards to the photo....How long will it take before she begins to tremble? How could she tremble, given that she is just a photo, not a gif?
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1176
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Other / Off-topic / Re: Answer the question above with a question.
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on: March 30, 2015, 04:43:26 PM
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Why shouldn't I care about it?
Are you talking about one special mountain? Why would you wanna talk about mountains at all? Have you read Sigmund Freud's theory about mountains and cliffs which are symbols of the male organ ? Is it worth reading once I complete the "Smell the Valleys" tome? I dont know there is such book, did you know that valley is a common feminine dream-symbol ? I know it is a dream symbol, do you know what kind of symbol? Should we keep dreaming? So, does it mean you did ever have this kind of dream ? how do you feel ? Are you Sigmund Freud reincarnated? "Dear Dr. Freud: Do you still consider me fuckin' nuts for wanting to fuck my table when I witness questions being questioned outta order?" Did you know that, according to Dalí himself, the only difference between him and a crazy man was that he was not crazy?
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1180
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Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
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on: March 30, 2015, 01:27:49 PM
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Confidently holding. Fortune favors the strong.
Holding coins when price is falling is not an honour but stupid lack of tactic when you're in bad position in trading imho. Best way to lose money in bear market. You can always sell to buy cheaper more coins (or cut losess) and this is smarter than holding. No, the smart thing is to buy and hold. More precisely, the other traders buy and hold, while I sell.
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