Do you have any thoughts on a solution?
Yes, do what I do, buy what can be afforded.
I may not ever obtain my desired target - 1BTC, but I am a long way from not being able to obtain additional bitcoin. Liquidity is not an issue.
Do you have any thoughts on a solution?
Oh, dear. Wolfie - I'm sorry to have to break this news to you but you've been pidgeon-holed as part of a group of partisan crypto scoundrels. Had you made better choices in life, you could have been part of a 'neutral' group that can see both the positive and negative attributes of bitcoin (posting those attributes in equal measures, at a ratio of 0:100).Who are 'they'?
BTC doesn't really have a concrete aim, it just *is* and people can use it as they desire, and people's opinions differ on what it should aim to be. Personally I don't think bitcoin needs to replace anything, it can just exist alongside. In practice I think it *is* probably replacing precious metals use as money, and sucking some allocations out of other stores of value too. If Bitcoin didn't exist I would have the money I have in bitcoin in something else, for me that's probably equities.Isn't this fundamentally the opposite of what BTC is aiming to do? i.e. Replace the current fiat system?
You mean 500b surely. But anyway, all of the supply could not easily be purchased, because the price would raise proportionally to the demand.However, given there are only 8m coins available at a market cap of roughly ~500m or so the entire supply could be easily purchased by a handful of companies today.
The above comment. I don't it should be top of the list for discussion.
There will of course be an issue with trying to obtain the desired amount of bitcoin.
Liquidity is not an issue.
In this event, I am not sure how the market would function because the number of transactions on the network would surely drop and if there are no transaction fees being generated what is the economic incentive for the nodes to stay operational?
It's down to 6.25 since the last halving, and currently about another 0.6 BTC in fees per block, which I guess can be considered added liquidity.There is 12.5 new coins mined every 10 mins?
No, they'd move the market too much by trying to buy $400b worth. Their first bitcoin would cost the current market price of 58k, but who knows what stratopshere the price would have gone to by the time they were buying the last coin.So a high $$ BTC price limits the amount of BTC an individual can buy but given that corporate/Bank Cash reserves > total circulating BTC $ value, the entire supply could be purchased tomorrow. For example Goldman Sachs alone has $400bln dollars in reserves vs $500bln BTC circulating supply.
Just to be clear, it wasn't an argument, and I wasn't saying firms should do anything. I was describing what is actually happening.The argument being made by @DazedInPontoon is that firms should...
I mean, you can come up with any number of hypothetical situations that result in btc failing. The easiest mistake to make is to say "what if this changes..." about one aspect of bitcoin without understanding how that one change would change other things and/or how other things change over time. If you go back a few years to when the reward was 50btc or even 25btc per block there was endless people predicting that bitcoin would now by dead with a reward of only 6.25btc per block because there would insufficient incentive for miners to mine.In this event, I am not sure how the market would function because the number of transactions on the network would surely drop and if there are no transaction fees being generated what is the economic incentive for the nodes to stay operational?
What different rules? This market was wide open to Wall Street to enter. They chose not to (until right now). Not only did they choose not to, they crapped all over this developing sector from a height - screaming fraud ( a la Jamie Dimon & others). They tried to snuff the fledgling industry out entirely by locking crypto startups out of banking (something that's still not fully resolved).Coinbase could be the greatest idea of all time but I can guarantee you thing. The days of exchanges like Coinbase operating under a different regulatory regime to other exchanges will end. They are currently regulated as a Money Services Business and yet are carrying out trading activities and indeed take positions to 'provide liquidity' in their exchange. No other exchange in regulated financial services is allowed to do this. You get an argument that exchanges like coinbase are becoming increasingly relevant to mainstream financial services. Well then, they should be ready to play by the same rules as other exchanges.
What argument? That's what we're seeing play out in real time - it's not a matter of argument or speculation.You get an argument that exchanges like coinbase are becoming increasingly relevant to mainstream financial services.
Well my tuppence worth is this. There is 12.5 new coins mined every 10 mins? In order for any institution to buy up existing supply, and new supply, it would send price even higher.
My thinking is that as the price gets higher and higher, some of those that bought in low will be continually tempted to sell. Along with newly mined coins, trying to dominate the supply in this manner, at higher and higher prices would simply be unsustainable.
At some point a large sell-off would be invoked ensuring continuing supply.
I do not envisage a liquidity issue at all. Even if so, it would be temporary.
It's down to 6.25 since the last halving, and currently about another 0.6 BTC in fees per block, which I guess can be considered added liquidity.
No, they'd move the market too much by trying to buy $400b worth. Their first bitcoin would cost the current market price of 58k, but who knows what stratopshere the price would have gone to by the time they were buying the last coin.
This is where liquidity is a consideration - "Can I buy x amount of dollars worth of BTC without moving the price too much". On a podcast recently I heard Raoul Pal say that many institutions who deal in large amounts basically wouldn't really consider bitcoin liquid enough to invest in to until it was at the $1T market cap.
Just to be clear, it wasn't an argument, and I wasn't saying firms should do anything. I was describing what is actually happening.
I mean, you can come up with any number of hypothetical situations that result in btc failing. The easiest mistake to make is to say "what if this changes..." about one aspect of bitcoin without understanding how that one change would change other things and/or how other things change over time. If you go back a few years to when the reward was 50btc or even 25btc per block there was endless people predicting that bitcoin would now by dead with a reward of only 6.25btc per block because there would insufficient incentive for miners to mine.
Bitcoin is very far from having a problem of not having enough transactions, the problem if any is that it can't support the demand for transactions!
Additionally if demand is driving the price to the moon, there is no need for transaction fees at all for decades as even a block reward of 1 btc or less would be incentive enough for miners.
We're getting into the "what if the restaurant had food so good that it got so busy that no one went there any more?" territory
I can’t disagree with the OP.This is a renowned economist talking. Are there any respected economists making the case for bitcoin? Ironically the amazing bitcoin performance of 2020, from 10k to 4k to 30k(?) spells its early demise. A nice steady performance would have been more indicative that bitcoin had come of age and was here to stay. 2017 was a similarly ridiculous year and it was followed by the collapse from 20k to 3k in 2018.
Bitcoin threads read like apartment in Bulgaria threads from 2005!
Each project is to be considered on its own merits. There will be category winners covering a whole host of use cases. Otherwise, the vast majority of projects will cease to exist. If we have to go through cycles of irrational over-exuberance to get there, so be it. Personally, I think that the emergence of 'meme coins' is truly moronic. However, if that's what people want to participate in, then that's totally up to them.Latest events of random “coins” spiking and single individuals manipulating the whole market only confirm my view.
I can't say that apartments in Bulgaria ever interested me. In what respect are they similar? What utterance here has contrived to lead you astray?Bitcoin threads read like apartment in Bulgaria threads from 2005!
In Ireland, they do. Up until recently, they played god by facilitating paddy power transactions via credit card whilst banning crypto transactions. More recently HSBC Bank has taken to banning customers from holding stock of companies that hold bitcoin. I wouldn't expect anything less from a bank with such high standards. Meanwhile, in the US, banks are gearing up to offer bitcoin to their customers. Payments firms like visa, mastercard and paypal are adapting to the change that's coming and that they know is inevitable.When it comes to mortgage applications I am surprised banks don’t take the same view of crypto as they do of paddy power transactions.
If you're referencing bitcoin here, then its volatility has been discussed at length on this sub-forum previously. There's a logic to it. It's going through a process of price discovery and that will continue for some years to come.The volatility and social media led pumps that are going on att the moment are absolute high risk madness.
Bitcoin isn't an equity - I agree.The “investment” is totally incomparable to equities or currency.
There are hype cycles and some get irrational, over-exuberant and downright greedy. I expect an 80% reset - but the difference is that where others here have called time on bitcoin (as they did in the last cycle), I expect its development to continue. During the last bear market, the talk was of it never seeing $20,000 again and of the poor 'suckers' that got caught in that process. I expect we will have a re-hash of the very same discussion on here. The only difference is that the $20,000 figure will be long forgotten about. And on it goes..When all the hype is done there will be a tiny minority who get mega wealthy and most people will get their fingers burnt.
Blockchain or something similar will provide a real mainstream currency with genuine value in time, but it will in my opinion originate via Washington, the Kremlin, or China, which will ironic as many people jumping on the hype train think it’s a means to protest and overthrow the “current system and institutions”. An Amazon or Google initiative might be the only thing to shift my thinking (Tesla is a huge brand but doesn’t touch billions of people daily, so it’s just more Twitter noise).
The discussion centres around bitcoin for the most part. Having said that, there is a huge market that is being exploited along the lines of the collectibles that you mention on other platforms - taking a digital approach to that via non-fungible tokens or NFTs. Not something that remotely interests me personally but I accept that people will pay more for the bragging rights of holding an original of something.presidentttt said:These “coins” are no more a currency than premier league stickers for a sticker book or Pokemon cards some people collected as kids. And I suspect will prove about as useful unless in time. You can pay up to a 100,000 for a pokemon card by the way!
You've often referenced the dot.com boom/bust Brendan, and I think it's entirely relevant to consider it. However, it shouldnt be forgotten that that particular wave of innovation changed everything. Out of the ashes came the Google's, Facebook's, Amazon's, etc. The expectation here is that most crypto projects will vapourise with category winners left standing.The dot.com ones did as well.
(Bulgarian property presumably? - I've no idea what state it is in today)
I can agree with this for the most part. I just would not bank on the category winner having entered the competition yet and i think there is some way to go.You've often referenced the dot.com boom/bust Brendan, and I think it's entirely relevant to consider it. However, it shouldnt be forgotten that that particular wave of innovation changed everything. Out of the ashes came the Google's, Facebook's, Amazon's, etc. The expectation here is that most crypto projects will vapourise with category winners left standing.