Brendan Burgess
Founder
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No one has provided any analysis or calculations to show when BTC's pricing entered bubble country.
[I've lost track of the number of times that I've asked this question. This question was always conveniently ignored until today. Today's answer from Brendan did not illuminate a whole lot.]
Nope - unlike you, I haven't spent anything on speculating on the value of Bitcoin, and have no intention of doing so, so I've nothing to gain or loose. I've already made the point I've no idea what will happen in the future, and don't see much point in speculating, given I've nothing to loose or gain.It will probably cost you a lot of money trying to win arguments about terminology rather than looking at what is actually happening and what will happen in the future.
If you say so: I've no interest in how much they're paying, certainly not enough to bother to look it up.Let's try to use some neutral terminology.
1) People are paying $7,500 today for one Bitcoin.
Yes there is: assuming the figure is acurate, it's the price it's being bought and sold at by real people with real cash. Same as the basis for believing the cost of a pint is whatever it is: it's what real people are paying real cash for it.2) There is absolutely no basis for this price whatsoever
In your opinion: clearly not in the opinion of many others.3) At some stage in the future, the people who are paying $7,500 today will not be able to sell them for anything more than cents, if they can sell them at all.
In your opinion......4)They will lose $7,500 or so per Bitcoin purchased today if they still own them.
No I didn't! I literally quoted the accepted definition from a dictionary: it's you who doesn't seem to understand what they mean. I've asked a couple of times what you think they mean, but you haven't bothered to reply.You may redefine the meaning of worth or value to mean price.
How is it dangerours to use words according to their accepted meaning? I'd say it's dangerous, or at best confusing, to choose your own meaning: how on earth are people expected to communicate if they make up their own meanings? I guess that's the meaning of "alternative facts"!I suppose that is your choice. But it's dangerous.
I am able; it's you who seem to have the difficulty in understanding what they mean: maybe you could explain to us what you think they mean, because using their conventional meanings your statements make no sense. How can something of no value sell for $7,500?It would be more helpful if you were able to distinguish between price and value.
Let me try another metaphor for the point I was trying to make. Imagine someone invented a technology for transferring grains of sand instantly all over the World, the grain of sand being the "asset". That would be a truly amazing technology and one could see a future where it might be able to "beam me up Scottie". But as it stands it delivers an asset that is worthless.
You would need a Canon lawyer to post in these parts. So a grain of sand is not worthless. Can I for the sake of saving my finger tips from typing have it understood that when in future I say "worthless" I mean "next to worthless".How can that be worthless if i can organise a beach party in my backyard the moment that the sun shines? Supply is higher in sand available, but certainly not worthless
You would need a Canon lawyer to post in these parts. So a grain of sand is not worthless. Can I for the sake of saving my finger tips from typing have it understood that when in future I say "worthless" I mean "next to worthless".
In post 45, you correctly pointed out that there may come a point where shorting BTC would be a bad bet - i.e. an unfavourable bet or as I described it at the outset of this debate an asymmetric bet not in your favour.
The corollary of this is that there may also a point where holding (or going long) BTC would be a good bet - i.e. a favourable bet or asymmetric bet in one's favour.
Let's say Bitcoin had hit $40,000 but had since dropped to $4.
I think that it's worth nothing, so in theory, I should short sell at $4 and collect my money when it goes to zero.
But it could stage a recovery. My maximum profit would be $4 and my potential loss would be $40,000.
The corollary of this is that there may also a point where holding (or going long) BTC would be a good bet
I am not sure that this follows. Genuinely, I don't know.
Well, I actually accept that the corollary isn't quite water-tight but it's almost there.
I don't know how many times you have to be told this but there are very few people that believe that Bitcoin / Crypto is going to replace FIAT in its entirety. I would suggest that of those that do, they are pretty new to the space and don't have a full understanding of it. However, you continue on with your assumption.I note that you are now adopting the tecate (another early morning poster) line that the community is not seeking to overturn the existing order. In your case that would appear to be resignation to reality for it seems to me that if crypto did per chance blow the central banking conspiracy out of the water you would be in Shortie Paradise.
Someone has already corrected you on this - but I'll reinforce the point. You cannot distinguish between Bitcoin and the Bitcoin blockchain. They are one and the same thing - and yes, it is a technological advancement.One more for the moment. Bitcoin is not a technology. Blockchain is a technology.
Firstly, I'm a pragmatist. I'm NEVER religious about anything....perish the thought! Otherwise, thank you for suggesting that I 'know my onions'....however, regrettably I am only scratching the surface in my knowledge of crypto generally...I either have not got the understanding or can't keep up as the space is moving at such a rate of noughts.But tecate has also been helpful. Whilst he clearly is more part of the religious wing of the community than fp, nonetheless he knows his onions. Amateur followers should take note of tecate's warnings on Tether and take special note that he is not holding bitcoin at the moment.
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