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Bitcoin Businesses The Almighty Buck

Bitcoin Hits Highest Levels In Almost Three Years (reuters.com) 78

Digital currency bitcoin hit its highest levels in almost three years on Friday, extending gains since India sparked a cash shortage by removing high-denomination bank notes from circulation a month ago. From a report on Reuters: Bitcoin was trading as high as $774 on the New York-based itBit exchange, up almost 1 percent on the day and the highest since February 2014, having climbed almost 9 percent in the past month. It has climbed around 80 percent so far this year, far exceeding its 35 percent rise in 2015.
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Bitcoin Hits Highest Levels In Almost Three Years

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    Also the strong dollar and the fear of what is going to happen after Trump undoes the banking regulations that were put in place after the Great Recession are driving this thing north.
    • Except Trump doesn't matter because those banking regulations have been stripped away one by one since at least the past 20 years, specifically pointing to the Gramm–Leach–Bliley Act
  • They are easy to spot, they include mentions of beanie babies, tulips and lists of "FACT"'s.

  • Since there's no one standing behind it.

    Of course even major currencies sometimes go down (like it happened to the Russian ruble after 1991) but it's still a very rare occurrence, unlike Bitcoin where any major event can trigger a colossal loss in its value because a lot of bitcoin owners will rush to cash their bitcoins when they see something worrisome happening thus they will accelerate its fall even further.

    Also there are other purely technical reasons why Bitcoin is not a stable currency and most likel

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Clearly you haven't seen the USD ten year chart.

      • Your argument only supports Artem's point. The USD has wandered up and down in about a 20% range in that time period. In comparison, Bitcoin has jumped around 50% within one year, and it looks crazier over long time periods.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    As a bitcoiner, this isn't news

    Stop posting every time it moves

  • Pump and Dump (Score:4, Interesting)

    by MMC Monster ( 602931 ) on Friday December 09, 2016 @04:40PM (#53455431)

    having climbed almost 9 percent in the past month. It has climbed around 80 percent so far this year, far exceeding its 35 percent rise in 2015.

    Don't forget mentioning that it may actually make up all the losses from 2014.

    I like the idea of Bitcoin. It's fantastic.

    But in reality it's still trading more like a commodity than a currency. Sort of like how Susan B. Anthony dollar coins are more hoarded than used as actual currency.

    • I like the idea of Bitcoin. It's fantastic.

      Not if you actually understand finance and risk it isn't. Bitcoin is an interesting experiment in some ways but as a practical matter for real world use it's rather clumsy, risky and impractical. It's flawed in so many ways I barely know where to begin. The only thing about it that I really think might eventually prove valuable is the block chain technology which has applications far beyond bitcoin.

      But in reality it's still trading more like a commodity than a currency.

      Currencies ARE commodities. The term commodity is specifically used for an economic good or service when t

      • by bspus ( 3656995 )

        "Not if you actually understand finance and risk it isn't"

        Well, I would hesitate admitting to knowing much about finance (despite holding a degree saying I supposedly do) but I'm pretty confident there are many people out there that really know their stuff and still find it fascinating

        "Bitcoin is an interesting experiment in some ways but as a practical matter for real world use it's rather clumsy, risky and impractical. It's flawed in so many ways I barely know where to begin"

        Flawed it is and undoubtedly s

  • With a mentally ill about to be president named trump the Chump many people may seek to get away from US cash as well as investments in US companies. If we get rid of Donald Chump maybe America would be a good place to invest in again. Please help dump the Chump ! Dump the Chump !
  • Did I wander into the Yahoo financial message boards? WTF? This is damn near a copy paste of every penny stock spam in my spam folder.

  • Major bummer for the guy who had 10,000 bitcoins on a hard drive and threw it away.

  • The India explanation is strange: if a note is removed from circulation, people would tend to use lower value notes. Why would they move to bitcoin?
    • by SeaFox ( 739806 )

      They're trying to find a way to hoard wealth that can't be taken away by the stroke of a pen (like what just happened).
      The issue is people are working under the table and the government is trying to increase revenue by making it harder to dodge taxes.
      Keeping money in cash where it can't be traced easily is how they were doing it.

      • If government is cracking on tax dodging, then how can they consider bitcoin as safe? In order to be used, money will have to be converted back into rupees, and this conversion business can be regulated. Government can monitor it for tax dodge, or even tax it on its own.
        • by SeaFox ( 739806 )

          If government is cracking on tax dodging, then how can they consider bitcoin as safe?

          Because Bitcoin isn't a form of currency (or commodity, if your see it as such) that the government has any direct control over. It's not looked as a "real money" enough to be tracked that way.

          In order to be used, money will have to be converted back into rupees, and this conversion business can be regulated. Government can monitor it for tax dodge, or even tax it on its own.

          I'm not too familiar with the Bitcoin exchange system, but I think you're overestimating the Indian government's abilities here. BitCoins can come from all sorts of places besides unreported income. People can resell items they already own (and therefore already paid tax on the income to purchase) for BitCoins, they c

          • I think you're overestimating the Indian government's abilities here

            Indeed, the government has little abilities to regulate bitcoin exchange in its own. But it has some teeth when bitcoin hits the local economy, either when bitcoins are converted into local currency, or when they are used for domestic financial transactions.

            In both case, regulation can uncover actor's identity and force cooperation with the tax administration. In such a situation, you can still remain anonymous and dodge tax for foreign income that is spend outside of the country, but I guess that is not th

            • by SeaFox ( 739806 )

              Indeed, the government has little abilities to regulate bitcoin exchange in its own. But it has some teeth when bitcoin hits the local economy, either when bitcoins are converted into local currency, or when they are used for domestic financial transactions.

              Not all BitCoin exchanges are under Indian government jurisdiction.
              What's to stop someone from getting rupees from an exchange in China, or Russia, etc?

              And you're still trying to apply a geographical identity to something on the Internet.

              What makes a BitCoin transaction a "domestic financial transaction"? The nationality of the people? Whether the goods/services were rendered on Indian soil? Where the wallets are located in meatspace? None of these are things that can be easily tracked by the government bec

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