Duke of Marmalade
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Absolutely, I think that is called bootstrapping. And certainly Satoshi was keenly aware that his bitcoin needed some form of utility/intrinsic/store of value to make it work as a medium of exchange which was its intended purpose. That is why gold was the primitive choice for MOE, its basic attraction to the human senses was a natural bootstrap, but I don't want to go down the gold rabbit hole....store of value can in some ways be helpful to it establishing itself as a means of exchange.
This uptick seems quite different to 2017. I'm not seeing much in the way of euphoria. There's much less 'dumb money' being added to the market and there's no ICO craze in play.Dukey said:I suspect that many of the folk dabbling in bitcoin do not bother themselves with such considerations and are simply climbing on a bandwagon out of FOMO. (Not saying you fall into that camp.)
I suspect that many of the folk dabbling in bitcoin do not bother themselves with such considerations and are simply climbing on a bandwagon out of FOMO.
I don't doubt that is a reasonable interpretation and for sure the crowd dynamic does not always call it right. But this is what represents value. The interpretation of information and putting a price on it or exploiting the price of the market. I hope you capitalised on it.
“Nouriel Roubini” said:13% down. Most manipulated asset ever. As I said the higher it goes the harder it will fall. FOMO-salivating retail suckers hoodwinked by manipulative whales will get shafted as in 2018!
I think that you might be a little crazy...…..but in a nice way!
What should a rationale investor do?
I don't know whether Roubini (courtesy @tecate ) has any evidence of manipulation. But certainly if a market can be manipulated it will be manipulated.Hi Duke
Is there any evidence of manipulation? I know it's supposedly limited in supply, but how do they manipulate it?
Sure they talk it up, but that is different.
Brendan
Nouriel finds himself in a difficult position. He's backed himself into a corner and can see the crystalisation of that 'fax machine' moment. Hence his attempt to extract himself via the acknowledgement that bitcoin is a store of value a couple of weeks back (having been wrong on bitcoin as early as 2013 and having said it would go to zero a couple of years ago).I don't know whether Roubini (courtesy @tecate ) has any evidence of manipulation.
You've nailed it, Dukey. Manipulation isn't exclusive to this market. It existed long before its existence. Ask George Soros and the Bank of England.But certainly if a market can be manipulated it will be manipulated.
“Nouriel Roubini” said:
13% down. Most manipulated asset ever. As I said the higher it goes the harder it will fall. FOMO-salivating retail suckers hoodwinked by manipulative whales will get shafted as in 2018!
You've nailed it, Dukey. Manipulation isn't exclusive to this market. It existed long before its existence. Ask George Soros and the Bank of England.
When you zoom out, bitcoins market cap is just a drop in the ocean. As it expands, market manipulation is going to be much harder to achieve.
Within reason. I'd imagine expanding the market will help more. Regulation of centralised entities (exchanges) I don't have so much issue with - as long as there isn't overreach. There are going to be a few years of battles on that front going forward.This is true and the solution for longer-established markets to stop manipulation is through additional centralized control implemented via regulation. As bitcoin is unregulated and the barrier to entry for establishing an exchange is much lower, manipulation is rife or even just stability of the market is lesser.
I don't like the Bitfinex/Tether setup simply because the possibility is there for bad practice. That said, what has been proven other than that they held 70% reserves as a result of having funds frozen through no fault of their own?There was the whole Bitfinex saga of (creating USDT and dubious accounting to manipulate the price),
Is that not just symptomatic of a tiny market? Otherwise, how does regulation fix this?and also more recently the algos reacitng to an April Fools joke causing a spike.
The two worlds are colliding to an extent so there will be various attempts at regulation - that's ongoing. Other than that, market grows and there's much less opportunity to manipulate.So if Bitcoin is to remain unregulated it will need to find other means to stop manipulation.
Within reason. I'd imagine expanding the market will help more. Regulation of centralised entities (exchanges) I don't have so much issue with - as long as there isn't overreach. There are going to be a few years of battles on that front going forward.
Is that not just symptomatic of a tiny market? Otherwise, how does regulation fix this?
@Dublinbay12 : I don't have a problem with regulation so long as it doesn't go too far. I don't know where or when you were trading crypto derivatives but there's a CME crypto futures market. They're as professional as you can get although a buddy of mine suggested he wouldn't avail of said market as he didn't like the trading fees. That said, trading fees and infrastructure has improved in crypto since a few years ago. It will need to do so again - it's an iterative process. I would have thought the market growing would bring that about to an extent.
Circling this back to Nouriel's manipulation mention, I don't know what he expects in a nascent/emerging/unregulated market. Google "market manipulation" + "gold" and we see another example that the crypto space doesn't in any way have exclusivity when it comes to such bad practice. Kettle calling pot black from Nouriel.
FATF travel rule and stuff of that nature...aside from the fact it simply won't work. And building on that, regulation that has been designed for an old paradigm and has no place when it comes to a completely new paradigm. The modern day equivalent of the red flag act of 1865....measures that lack understanding of the technology and innovation at hand and apply regulation that destroys that innovation.What regulation is too far?
Indeed it is. A lot of the time, it can and does achieve exactly that. That doesn't mean that it does so all of the time or that it can't go too far into nanny-state mode (or misunderstand or be unsympathetic to the fintech at hand - as I alluded to above).Regulation is aimed to protect the market and participants.
That's why I suggested it to you. If you want a similar regulatory standard and physically settled, have you tried Bakkt?However, CME is a regulated entity and futures a regulated market
Just in case there's a suggestion that this was being disputed, it wasn't. We're talking about the comparison of a market developed over an age vs. one that's finding its feet. It couldn't possibly be any other way. To expect it to develop any other way is also wayward.It is a straight forward fact that the Crypto Market is less advanced than Financial Markets.
FATF travel rule and stuff of that nature...aside from the fact it simply won't work. And building on that, regulation that has been designed for an old paradigm and has no place when it comes to a completely new paradigm. The modern day equivalent of the red flag act of 1865....measures that lack understanding of the technology and innovation at hand and apply regulation that destroys that innovation.
Indeed it is. A lot of the time, it can and does achieve exactly that. That doesn't mean that it does so all of the time or that it can't go too far into nanny-state mode (or misunderstand or be unsympathetic to the fintech at hand - as I alluded to above).
That's why I suggested it to you. If you want a similar regulatory standard and physically settled, have you tried Bakkt?
Just in case there's a suggestion that this was being disputed, it wasn't. We're talking about the comparison of a market developed over an age vs. one that's finding its feet. It couldn't possibly be any other way. To expect it to develop any other way is also wayward.
You never did confirm - what was your rationale for holding/speculating on/investing in/trading bitcoin?
I disagree. Clearly they're far from the same thing - its not a physically settled product - but its relevant to the entire sector.You are missing the point I made.........The CME Futures have little to do with the actual Crypto Market Infrastructure on which I was speaking to. They are cashed settled products that reference the price of Bitcoin, no crypto exchanges are made when purchasing it is USD.
Sorry for your troubles - but all I can say is that you re-read my previous post. In short, regulation can be good and it can also be very bad - it depends on the specifics. Perhaps you think its ok to accept any old regulation that's applied. That's not my position.I am left confused on your position, as your first point above makes you seem very anti-regulation and saying regulation can destroy innovation. Yet you point to BTC gaining legitimacy through the likes of CME and BAKKT. However, these are regulated entities and that is a contrast against your position on regulation.
I didnt suggest either/or. Other than that, I disagree - market size helps.The simple point you have not disproved is that a larger market does not mean a better market. The key way to reduce fraud, stability, arbitrage opportunities is through regulation as proven in the financial markets.
It has every relevance but I don't mind if you don't answer. To my mind, it clarifies plenty based on previous discussion.This has no relevance to this discussion.
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