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Bitcoin The Almighty Buck

This Is the Week Wall Street Went Nuts Over Cryptocurrencies (bloomberg.com) 180

Wall Street banks that weren't already on the bitcoin bandwagon appear to be piling on, or least eyeing seats, after the cryptocurrency surged to all-time highs this week on the way to $6,000. From a report: Analysts are working to keep up with demand from clients for information. UBS and Citigroup published extensive explainers on blockchain technology, while senior executives at JPMorgan Chase warmed to the cryptocurrency during the bank's third-quarter earnings call. The digital currency has risen more than fivefold after trading at less than $1,000 as recently as December, breaking the $5,000 mark this week and already targeting the next thousand-dollar level. Throughout its rise, the cryptocurrency shrugged off tighter regulations, feuding factions and warnings from the likes of JPMorgan's Jamie Dimon of fraud and an eventual price collapse.
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This Is the Week Wall Street Went Nuts Over Cryptocurrencies

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  • Bubble! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by XXongo ( 3986865 ) on Friday October 13, 2017 @01:02PM (#55363667) Homepage
    http://www.investopedia.com/te... [investopedia.com]

    What is a 'Bubble'
    A bubble is an economic cycle characterized by rapid escalation of asset prices followed by a contraction. It is created by a surge in asset prices unwarranted by the fundamentals of the asset M and driven by exuberant market behavior.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      If you shout "bubble" a million times, there's a good chance you might be right, once.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        If there is a commodity whose trading value increases five-fold in under a year, and you shout “bubble” (just once), there is a good chance you might be right once.

        Any questions?

        • If there is an IPO whose trading value increases five-fold in under a year, and you shout “bubble” (just once), there is a good chance you might be right once. Just once.

          Any questions?

          • by Jzanu ( 668651 )
            Company IPO only happens once, so if he is right just once then you just bought a useless thing more overvalued than Enron.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        People are buying Bitcoin mainly because they think it's a way to make money fast. That is obviously not sustainable.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          It's a good way to grow money off the naive though. Buy, wait a short time and resell. Don't invest too much because I agree it will collapse but might as well ride the bubble for a bit. #capitalism

      • is that similar to shouting Apps?
    • Re:Bubble! (Score:5, Interesting)

      by JesseMcDonald ( 536341 ) on Friday October 13, 2017 @01:30PM (#55363897) Homepage

      You can't categorically declare that Bitcoin's price is "unwarranted by the fundamentals of the asset". It's a new asset type and its fundamentals are yet to be determined. We're still feeling out Bitcoin's ultimate utility and long-term viability. Surges like this are inevitable.

      We've gone through this process several times already. Each time people have declared it a "bubble", and yet... while each surge has been followed by a "crash", the average price after each crash has been significantly higher than the average price before the preceding surge. This was true at $2, $30, $200, $1200, and $4000. The long-term trend has been toward gradually increasing prices and less volatility.

      • by JeffSh ( 71237 )

        the post all-time-high "crash" isnt a "crash" because it's a profit taking exercise that gets the currency in the hands of new adopters.

        The people who held the currency before the spike realize gains and cash them out. This causes a retraction as new adopters buy in, and then before long its time for a new series of gains, and then profit taking occurrs again.

        this will happen multiple times as bitcoin has the potential to become a world wide relevant and daily traded store of value.

      • Its fundamental worth is less than a Groupon. And unlike something like gold that you can make things out of even if a pure gold meteor crashed down and increased supply by some crazy amount, the stuff is all worthless once somebody builds a better calculator.
      • Bitcoin's purpose is to transfer value, either in space or in time. It is not useful in itself, just like US dollars (the paper kind) are only useful in themselves for snorting white powder. Their usefulness comes in being able to trade for other things. Bitcoin is especially useful when the trade is over long distances with barriers in the way. Paper dollars are most useful in immediate local trade. They each have their niche.

        Since the supply of bitcoins for immediate purchase is limited, their market

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Don't call it a bubble until it meets it's terms, i.e. bitcoin needs to collapse in value then can be classified as a bubble. Surge in price alone isn't enough nor saying the fundamentals aren't there, since clearly many would argue quite the opposite.
    • How many appreciating bubbles does bitcoin have to go through before bitcoin stops being a just a "bubble"
    • Yep, Wall St. + Bitcoin is a match made in hell. Wall St. will gamble away everything they have, bankers will get their huge bonuses, executives will get stinking rich, and when they music stops, guess who's going to pay the bill?
  • Oh for fucks sakes (Score:3, Insightful)

    by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday October 13, 2017 @01:12PM (#55363729)
    it's only valuable because it's backended by a ton of illegal activity (money laundering, gambling, drugs, ransomware). Nobody's buying much of anything legitimate with this stuff because it's not backed by governments, no will it be. Sooner or later the government will crack down and it'll all collapse.

    Wall Street has always been a combination shell game and method for the ruling class to skim 50-60% off the economy without doing any real work, but this is just ridiculous. Come to think of it that's the only way I could see Crypto currency get a kind of legitimacy. I could see the ruling class forcing us to use it to buy stuff so they can skim even more off us working stiff's wages. Like credit cards but without the convenience and buyer protections.
    • Yes, Bitcoin is primarily purpose is for regulatory arbitrage and thus exists as a hedge against anarchism where states indirectly subsidize its value. The most effective way for states to attack bitcoin is to legalize everything and eliminate all taxes which I don't think is very realistic to ever occur thus feeding into the value proposition of bitcoin. There is a circular economy of the under-served who need bitcoin to survive and these users create an inelastic demand on a disinflationary supply of bitc
  • by Wrath0fb0b ( 302444 ) on Friday October 13, 2017 @01:28PM (#55363879)

    So in a functioning market, investors should be able to go long or short on an asset -- that is, it should be possible to assert that it will rise and to assert that it will fall (or if you're clever, buying options that assert the price will remain right where it is).

    As far as I can see, a hypothetical person that wanted to bet that bitcoin would fall doesn't really have a vehicle by which to take that position.

    • There are exchanges that offer such services.
    • That is partially why the banks want to play.

      This will end well...

    • There are a number of exchanges where you can short it. https://www.bitmex.com/ is one of them.

    • "investors should be able to go long or short on an asset"

      Um...why? Those are derivatives. If you invest in a small company, i.e., not publicly traded, derivatives don't exist. You invest because you believe the company will increase in value. If you believe the opposite, you sell your investment.

      Options, and indeed all derivatives, are mostly tools for the big investment houses and banks. In the best case, this is to hedge their bets, to limit potential losses. In the worst case, they use these tools to ma

    • shorting should be outlawed? I get the concept but it's pretty much gambling of the worst sort. Plus if you're a big investor with lots of power you've suddenly got incentive to make a company fail. Heck, in a crypto currency market you could probably do all sorts of stuff to tank the price after you shorted it.
    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      So where can I go short on bitcoin?

      Greetings to you. I am Mohammed Abacha,the son of the late Nigerian Head of State who died on the 8th of June 1998.

      It is my great pleasure to write to you and present my business proposal for your consideration and possible acceptance which you will find mutually beneficial to both parties. In order to enable you to short the bitcoins... I will make the following proposition for you:

      If you agree to wire $6500 to an agreed upon 3rd party in collateral at my Bank of new

    • Wow you really didn't look very hard. The first google result for "how to short bitcoin" seems pretty informative
      http://www.investopedia.com/ne... [investopedia.com]

      Seems there are plenty of methods, no more difficult than shorting pretty much anything else.

      That got 5 insightful? Slashdot, your standards are dropping

    • You have been able to short bitcoin for the last 5 years. Many exchanges allow you to open up shorts. Here is a regulated exchange in the US that allows you to short Bitcoin - https://support.kraken.com/hc/... [kraken.com]
  • ...ITS WORKING!!!

    -Lo Pan

  • Never a speculative bubble it didn't like.

  • by JasonVergo ( 101331 ) on Friday October 13, 2017 @02:19PM (#55364245)

    Back in 2011, Slashdot had a post about bitcoin. I thought it sounded interesting. So, I mined some and sent some money via dwolla to tradehill to mt.gox or something crazy like that and bought some. That $300 is now worth over $250k. I don't remember there being that many hater on the thread back then. If there were, I'm glad I didn't listen to them.

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