Brendan Burgess
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I am not sure what it's doing but it's fun sliding those sliders around.
I suppose it forces people who want to calculate the value to make estimates.
Brendan
1,000 as per spreadsheet, earlier post editedI can open it , do you close out at 1 dollar or 1000?
Where did you get the 1% downward weekly drift and 0.5% downward weekly drift numbers from?
Hi Dublin Bay
If you give me odds of 6/1 on a throw of a 5 on a die, I have a positive expected outcome. If I roll it 120 times, I will roll a 5, twenty times and win €120. I will roll something else 100 times and lose €100. So I can expect a profit of €20 from the 120 rolls.
It's not quite the same with Bitcoin, but it's something similar. I could short it now and it could rise. If I could do multiple shorts I would expect a profit as the ultimate price is zero.
Brendan
I think the really big revelation is that all this speculation about bitcoin's ultimate destiny stands or falls on its widespread adoption as a medium of exchange. I don't see that happening and I don't think current speculators would be too convinced either. And if by some chance it really did start to gain a foothold as a medium of exchange the monetary authorities would have to clamp down on it hard. To me then its best case final resting place is dominating the black market and as it happens the tool says that 50% of that market would support the current price.I am not sure what it's doing but it's fun sliding those sliders around.
I suppose it forces people who want to calculate the value to make estimates.
Brendan
1,000 as per spreadsheet, earlier post edited
I used the John Bowe technique in coming up with the model's parameters
courtesy of tecateCan you send me a link to that John bowe technique?
courtesy of tecate
The volatility could probably be modeled from historic data but the drift has to be subjective I fear.So you just made them figures up , you had me excited about making money shorting it .
Maybe this is the model Brendan would use for figuring out the fair price of gold?So you just made them figures up , you had me excited about making money shorting it .
The volatility could probably be modeled from historic data but the drift has to be subjective I fear.
The volatility could probably be modeled from historic data but the drift has to be subjective I fear.
You just made an excel spreadsheet with random figures and ran a simulation to decide if it was value shorting ? I'm not sure if your been real or not , that probably explains why you still in debt at 40
I did inset a smile but it didn't show upThink you might have just undone all the good you have done with previous posts with a comment like that.
Think you might have just undone all the good you have done with previous posts with a comment like that.
Your right though I struggle with recognising sarcasm and long form debates, I have mild autistic tendencies. So I'll be closing my account as to protect my over loading brain. Sorry if offence caused Duke
Yes I was puzzled by the comment. Thanks to Sunny for having the matter cleared up - no offence taken.Your right though I struggle with recognising sarcasm and long form debates, I have mild autistic tendencies. So I'll be closing my account as to protect my over loading brain. Sorry if offence caused Duke
I must say I didn't have tecate down for a communist being a proponent of a no government "currency" such as Bitcoin.courtesy of tecate
So after all this discussion your claim that bitcoin will return to its ultimate destination of zero is not predicated on anything other than the realization that everything will, one day, return to zero?
I assumed, naively now it seems, that you were calling out bitcoins ultimate destination , if not imminently, but within at least a short-term period of 18-24 months?
The investor may still be wrong, they may get the timing wrong, but without this timeframe in mind, then the potential gains going long far outweigh the potential gains going short.
Surely a rational investor can see this?
The article in its entirety is a good writeup in the consideration of Bitcoin. Always the penchant to cherry pick, your Dukeness. The entire article can be found here. I’d encourage people to read the whole thing - not just Dukey’s highlights!This is a good summary of bitcoin as a store of value:
Forgive the terrible pun but this is pure gold from his Dukeness!Ultimately bitcoin's status as a store of value stands or falls on its acceptance and penetration as a medium of exchange. Note that Gold is not used as a medium of exchange at all in the developed world and yet it has established itself as a store of value.
John Kelleher's Investopedia Article said:Utility also requires that currencies be easily moved from one location to another. Burdensome precious metals and commodities don't easily meet this stipulation.
John Kelleher's Investopedia Article said:Generally, scarcity can drive value higher. This can be seen with precious metals like gold.
On these grounds alone the representation of bitcoin as digital gold and pictures of gold bitcoins on the internet are almost irresponsible.
tecate tries to separate bitcoin's store of value from its use as a medium of exchange but this summary from Investopedia shows that he is deluding himself.
He is speculating that ultimately bitcoin will be a store of value but what he does not seem to realise is that in effect he is speculating that it will ultimately establish itself as a major medium of exchange.
So a question for tecate, which I do not expect him to answer. If it is finally recognised that bitcoin will not achieve meaningful penetration as a medium of exchange does he still think it will survive as a store of value?
The remarkable success and occasional spectacular failure of Fiat was the spawning ground for bitcoin.
Until relatively recently, the idea of a currency without intrinsic backing would have been a laughing stock.
The great silver lining of the 30s depression was the recognition that money did not need the backing of physical gold.
John Kelleher's Investopedia Article said:Countries left the gold standard in an effort to curb concerns about runs on federal gold supplies.
Yes, Fiat does not have intrinsic value, though it is backed the debts of economic agents.
Nonetheless, our ancestors would be right to be vary wary of a money which had no intrinsic value. That the concept survives and serves society so well in the main requires very careful management and oversight.
John Kelleher's Investopedia Article said:Currency is usable if it is a store of value, or, put differently, if it can reliably be counted on to maintain its relative value over time and without depreciating.
If I ever do worry about the value of my humble Fiat holding, I reassure myself that there is a sophisticated machinery in place to support it.
Nostrodamos strikes again.Some day, soon, when Fiat has weathered its current storm and when the bitcoin speculators get burnt yet again the Satoshi will drop that there is no machinery in place to actually underpin its price. It will then drop to earth like a stone.
Here are Kelleher's characteristics of money: