LDFerguson
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On a serious note, what is the risk rating of such an "investment"?
Surprisingly, ETC only rated it 6 out of 7 in their KID. I'd love to see the calculations!By my own calculations, using the industry-standard risk rating scale of 1 to 7, I'd calculate them to be about a 73
Surprisingly, ETC only rated it 6 out of 7 in their KID. I'd love to see the calculations!
That's right Dukey - we shouldn't let people think for themselves or take responsibility for themselves.Surely there are some constraints on what self directed pensions are invested in.
Interesting that you should bring that up Dukey - because between 2018 and 2020 many banks prevented people from buying cryptocurrency via bank issued credit/debit cards yet it was totally fine to gamble on horses/dogs and whatever else and pay with said cards.For example can they bet on the horses?
I disagree entirely. It just needs to be position-sized correctly. There are plenty in the US who have included Grayscale (GBTC) within their IRAs and they've reaped the benefits.If so, it is behoven on the Central Bank to intervene and ban this facility outright - it is every bit as unsuitable in a pension vehicle as betting on the horses.
And yet in a recent interview, he conceded that it was a store of value - an attempted u-turn. To say that the guy is bitter and twisted on the subject is a bit of an understatement.Professor Roubini has made it clear that crypto is not an asset never mind and investment.
Folk can spend their own money as they please as long as it is not criminal.That's right Dukey - we shouldn't let people think for themselves or take responsibility for themselves.
Any claims that bitcoin is a Ponzi Scheme is laughable. Anything that could be classed as a Ponzi has been carefully orchestrated as a fraud. If that's your claim, please point out the individual or individuals who have masterminded this fraud? Secondly, point me towards a Ponzi which has been run through multiple peaks and troughs. You won't be able to as there's no such example.Taxpayers’ money should nor be sucked into a Ponzi scheme.
You're one of the few holdouts in terms of attempts to claim that bitcoin equals Tulipmania. They're in no way comparable given that tulips possess none of the internationally accepted characteristics of a store of value or money whereas bitcoin on the other hand does.These loans are for maybe 30 years or more. Can anybody doubt that bitcoin will have cryptoed through the tulips by then?
Typically you dismiss my metaphors by pointing out their lack of 100% accuracy, no metaphor is 100% accurate. I don't challenge your description of "digital gold" by pointing out that you can't make necklaces out of bitcoin.Any claims that bitcoin is a Ponzi Scheme is laughable. Anything that could be classed as a Ponzi has been carefully orchestrated as a fraud. If that's your claim, please point out the individual or individuals who have masterminded this fraud? Secondly, point me towards a Ponzi which has been run through multiple peaks and troughs. You won't be able to as there's no such example.
You're one of the few holdouts in terms of attempts to claim that bitcoin equals Tulipmania. They're in no way comparable given that tulips possess none of the internationally accepted characteristics of a store of value or money whereas bitcoin on the other hand does.
Whilst you can't be objective enough to accept the possibility that bitcoin will continue to be successful, I'm on record as accepting that it could potentially fail. However, in the case of pensions or anything else for that matter, I've long since advocated for the inclusion of no more than a few percent within an overall portfolio. To my mind, it's now irresponsible to not gain that limited exposure to an asset that presents with asymmetric risk.
Here's a popular culture take on the type of practice you're trying to shine a light on, though.
Poor @WolfeTone really struggled to come up with a economist who thought otherwise.
For your sake I hope not as the clue is in the 'digital' part.I don't challenge your description of "digital gold" by pointing out that you can't make necklaces out of bitcoin.
I don't give a fiddlers about your celebrity economist. He's become bitter and twisted on the subject. It has become 100% obvious that he lacks any objectivity on the subject. In one of those interviews that were linked in the other thread, he dismisses decentralised blockchain in its entirety. The days of people accepting the pronouncements of some celebrity high priest economist are long gone. They'll have to justify their takes - like the rest of us. If you apply first principles, you couldn't possibly agree with your new found friend on the ponzi scheme jibe.When I pass on the assertions of learned observers that crypto is a Ponzi scheme, I am not suggesting it was started by an Italian gentleman.
I know precisely what you meant Duke - you use totally inaccurate disparaging phraseology in an attempt to mislead and tar and feather. Bitcoin is not a ponzi scheme and anyone who says that it is is a liar.You know what is meant - when it blows up it will be the last suckers in who will be badly burnt. Along the way the manipulating whales will have performed a spectacular fraud.
Your reference to Tulipmania is precisely that. When called on it, you know that you can't defend the point. And again, your celebrity economist knows better - but he lacks the objectivity to not use such a term.My reference to Tulipmania is not to suggest that bitcoin is a bulbous flowering plant.
That's an IF - not a when. And IF it does, it has nothing whatsoever to do with Tulipmania. If you really believe that it does, then back that assertion up. Tulips had NONE of the characteristics of a store of value or money back then. Bitcoin has many of those characteristics.When crypto does go to zero we will have a unique episode in the human history of tulip like mania, but one thing will set it apart.
What of it? Wall Street still exists, right? What you're claiming is entirely different. You're claiming that bitcoin goes away - permanently. And whilst we're on the subject, if a stock market crash is a thing for you, WHY do you not get as animated about that? Where was your contempt for the stock market crash that happened in March of last year? Where is your contempt for the fact that Wall Street makes NO sense right now - as it moves up when the real economy goes into the crapper? Where is your contempt for the fact that a conventional market crash is inevitable - it's just a question of when that will happen?Nobody doubted that pre Wall Street crash stocks had some value.
Again, you're claiming that bitcoin goes away completely. That's entirely different to dot.com - out of which by the way a whole wave of innovation emerged.Nobody doubted that dot.com stocks had some value.
And maybe it's time to rely on first principles rather than some gravy train celebrity economist patroned by a centralised system that is diametrically opposed to decentralised cryptocurrency.With crypto it seems to me that the great majority of informed observers believe it has zero value.
Yeah, on that Duke...you've gone on a couple of times about one experts view trumping another. You want me to take Fax Machine Guy's word for it? No thanks!Poor @WolfeTone really struggled to come up with a economist who thought otherwise.
Yes, you have brought all these unfounded claims up before. I guess i could have responded with a [broken link removed] of your view on bitcoin instead.Oh dear. It has all been said before. Looks like this is another thread to bite the dust which is a pity as it was about the rather serious subject of pension funds investing in crypto.
Explain please. If it means that btc downside is currently only $30k whilst its upside has no numerical bounds, that is true of any share price.Whether it's still true is debatable but, without doubt, for many years, Bitcoin presented, as Tecate very nicely described it, positive asymmetric risk.
Could you provide links to any of these studies?Also, studies repeatedly show that folk are more likely to take too little, rather than too much, risk with their pension savings.
As I understand it, the Irish Revenue agree with Professor Roubini that btc is not an asset and therefore it is not subject to CGT in any environment - rather like a bet on the horses.
the Irish Revenue agree with Professor Roubini that btc is not an asset and therefore it is not subject to CGT in any environment - rather like a bet on the horses.
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