Folster
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- Joined
- Jun 23, 2005
- Posts
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This is public knowledge and has always been. This should be priced in, but nothing makes sense with bitcoin.xc_hide_links_from_guests_guests_error_hide_media
This is public knowledge and has always been. This should be priced in, but nothing makes sense with bitcoin.xc_hide_links_from_guests_guests_error_hide_media
April 20th sounds like a good day for something crypto to happen to me. Bicycle day the day before and then 4-20 hits. I think those drugs help you think something with no backing has value.xc_hide_links_from_guests_guests_error_hide_media
I still can't comprehend bitcoin and crypto, but I'm increasingly convinced it will play a role in a future financial collapse or or at the very least exasperate it as institutional investors roll in and stable coins gobble up treasuries.
Stable coins have become an interesting partner for the US government as other nations start divesting from the US dollar. I've read that stable coins only account for 2% of Treasury purchases now, but what happens at 10-20%?
I still haven't seen a convincing use case outside of HODL. We've seen how it reacts in a bear market and it still hasn't experienced a prolonged bear market or a stiff recession. I thought FTX was the death knell for crypto, but I was wrong and have been wrong about crypto i.e. bitcoin since the beginning.
I'm still not buying.
There is still no intrinsic value and no reason for it to appreciate.
It seems the only reason it is appreciating is current and expected demand continuing to grow. At some point everybody who wants it will have it. Then what?
I wonder whether the software could support "volume discounts." Psychologically, there's a big difference between paying $1000 for a tiny fraction of coin versus paying $1B for that tiny fraction times a million. I can imagine that we get to a point where the price per unit varies considerably according to how many units are being transacted.
I'm still leary of coins. Back when Bitcoin first came out i acquired a few coins by joining some sites and such... iirc i got 6 coins total. But at the time they were worth nothing so i never stuck with the sites because they didnt provide good information on traditional investments...I know gold coins work that way. You pay more per ounce for the smaller coins.
It's just crazy to me that people are paying 113,000 US dollars for one bitcoin. Imagine if you couldn't buy fractional coins and you had to save up to buy one. Forking over $113K for some blockchain coding. We were right about NFTs; maybe bitcoin is just going to take longer.