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Bitcoin Digital The Almighty Buck Technology

Cryptocurrency Wipeout Deepens To $640 Billion As Ether Leads Declines (bloomberg.com) 174

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: The cryptocurrency bear market plumbed a fresh 10-month low on Monday as Bitcoin's biggest rival tumbled and U.S. regulators suspended trading in two securities linked to digital assets. Ether, the second-largest virtual currency, slumped 11 percent from its level at 5 p.m. New York time on Friday, according to Bloomberg composite pricing. Bitcoin declined 2.4 percent, while the market capitalization of digital assets tracked by CoinMarketCap.com shrank to about $197 billion -- down almost $640 billion from its January peak. Cryptocurrencies have declined for five of the past six weeks amid concern that a broader adoption of digital assets will take longer than some had anticipated. That worry was underscored over the weekend after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission temporarily suspended trading in two exchange-traded notes linked to cryptocurrencies and Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin told Bloomberg that the days of explosive growth in the blockchain industry have likely come and gone.
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Cryptocurrency Wipeout Deepens To $640 Billion As Ether Leads Declines

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  • "Loss" (Score:3, Informative)

    by lordlod ( 458156 ) on Monday September 10, 2018 @11:41PM (#57288294)

    The $640 billion loss that is being reported is against the massive gains late last year. The money appeared out of nowhere when everybody thought a crytocoin was worth something and is disappears to nowhere when everybody realised that they were wrong.

    Sure, some people bought in when the market was high and have lost their shirts. Most of the losses though are from people who paid $300 for their coin years ago and now it is only worth $9000 instead of $25000.

    • Re:"Loss" (Score:5, Insightful)

      by DRJlaw ( 946416 ) on Monday September 10, 2018 @11:44PM (#57288302)

      Most of the losses though are from people who paid $300 for their coin years ago and now it is only worth $9000 instead of $25000.

      CItation needed. Especially since literally everyone would sell you their coin for $9000 at this point.

      • by lordlod ( 458156 )

        Most of the losses though are from people who paid $300 for their coin years ago and now it is only worth $9000 instead of $25000.

        CItation needed. Especially since literally everyone would sell you their coin for $9000 at this point.

        Was looking at the price in AUD not USD. Same ratio applies though.

    • Re:"Loss" (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday September 11, 2018 @12:14AM (#57288384)

      It's disingenuous to suggest there hasn't be a lot of actual loss.

      I'd say the loss of planetary health due to the waste of energy, some portion of which was provided by fossil fuels, is significant.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • ...as always, is "Is it more a Pyramid or a Ponzi?"

  • by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Monday September 10, 2018 @11:46PM (#57288314)

    You bought a security with no inherent value, based on the idea that someone else would, for some reason, pay more for it than you did. It worked out for some people, didn't for others. But why would you think you had more than a 50/50 chance? (Very skillful traders can beat those odds by trading trends in price action and being extremely disciplined.)

    Meanwhile, there are lots of assets and securities with real underlying value to trade. You can understand the value and even learn to anticipate changes in that value. Why not trade those instead?

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      But, but ... this cryptocurrency is new and magic!

      Well, at least that is what I understand its proponents claim. Have yet to find any evidence for that.

    • It's all greater fool. When GM went bankrupt, I couldn't trade my stock for a drill press or robot - only bondholders get to do that, and in GM's case, they got screwed too, thanks to the O administration, and most are still very butt-hurt about it, just ask one. Stock has zero intrinsic value - it's a loan to the company that they don't have to pay back - you still have to find a greater fool. The company may - at their discretion - pay a dividend, but there's no legal requirement to do so. Hey, I trad
      • by Kohath ( 38547 )

        It's all greater fool. When GM went bankrupt, I couldn't trade my stock for a drill press or robot - only bondholders get to do that

        Because GM value had gone down below zero and the bond holders had a contract. Other companies have positive values, so their stock has positive inherent value.

        You seem to have developed an understanding based on one unusual thing that happened one time, disregarding everything else that happens every other time. That's a useful understanding for a specific set of extreme outlier events, but not for any other time. If you only want to be right once every 20 years, then I congratulate you on achieving tha

    • by sacrilicious ( 316896 ) <qbgfynfu.opt@recursor.net> on Tuesday September 11, 2018 @10:54AM (#57290216) Homepage

      You bought a security with no inherent value, based on the idea that someone else would, for some reason, pay more for it than you did.

      People can't stop thinking about cryptocurrency in terms of get-rich-quick, or even get-rich-period. Cryptocurrency is NOT ABOUT INVESTING, no more than Euros are about investing. Cryptocurrency is a transaction facilitator, the novel thing about it being that said transactions are beyond the control of the banking industry. Ah well; in the same way that lotteries are taxes on people who are bad at math, crypto has the apparent side effect of being a tax on people who are bad at finance. Having been harassed for being a nerd in middle school, I'm feeling a certain sanguinity about it all.

    • * if that Underlying Value is expressed in dollars, there's the risk of inflation. Which, ask anyone in Venezuela today how that can go.
      * A huge % of the world is unbanked, and not allowed to participate in the stock market. Same goes for GICs, savings bonds. If Banks don't like you, for whatever reason you're cut out of having a stable place to put your money.
      * I've been trying to buy a house on/off since 2013 - so far I haven't got a single serious offer for anyone to sell me one in a place I co
  • The good news is that my Ethereum wallet has a virtual bobblehead in it. That's got to be worth something, right? I hope it's enough to pay for bus fare back to my parents' basement.

    https://hardware.slashdot.org/... [slashdot.org]

  • by FeelGood314 ( 2516288 ) on Tuesday September 11, 2018 @12:24AM (#57288396)
    The cost of mining is now a non-trivial percentage of the worlds economy. The miners now have to pay real world money to pay for the electricity and the money they borrowed to buy/build their rigs. This constant selling of crypto currency to finance the mining likely means that we have either seen the last crypto currency rally or maybe there is just one more left.

    We have also now seen the limits of what crypto currencies can do and it looks like the existing banking infrastructure does it better...For now. Maybe a highly scalable proof of stake currency will be invented. Maybe one of this existing currencies can already securely do it. It's not going to be bitcoin though.
  • by labnet ( 457441 ) on Tuesday September 11, 2018 @12:42AM (#57288446)

    If you had of bought/made bitcoin for $1 and next week it went to $2.50.. then the value started sliding back, and you sold for $2: would have you patted yourself on the back for your 100% gain?
    It could have been the case that when you sold for $2, it kept going down to zero.
    The fact it went to $20k is a once in a generation fluke.

    Speculation is a mugs game.

    • The fact it went to $20k is a once in a generation fluke.

      lol no, there's a sucker born every minute.

    • The fact it went to (high number) is a once in a generation fluke

      This has happened 3 times in Bitcoin's 10 year history. Not so much of a one time fluke now is it? People said this exact same sentence during the last two bubbles.

  • Meanwhile, Dogecoin is doing relatively well. It's down since yesterday up 300% form last month!

    =Smidge=

  • This judgement day for the shitcoins as been both predicted and expected for some time.

    The interesting thing to watch is the relative performance of BTC and it's market dominance.

    I continue to acquire BTC, and we'll see what the future brings.

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday September 11, 2018 @08:02AM (#57289350)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • How to do really well in the cryptocurrency marketplace: Don't. Buy. The. Empty. Fucking. Bag.

      I agree with what I interpret your advice to mean, which is "do not invest in cryptocurrency". I think it's sound advice.

      I'll also make the point that despite that advice being sound, cryptocurrency is here to stay... not because there will be an endless stream of "investors" in it (there won't, at least not of significant volume), but because it will continue to enable decentralized transactions, an aspect which makes it both very useful and disruptive. Prediction: the only way cryptocurrency will ever

      • I've been doing "decentralized transactions" all my life for decades, before cryptocurrency

        it's a very bad solution (illiquid, volatile) looking for a problem

      • While I expect cryptocurrencies to not disappear, what kills them is when the bounties earned are less than other uses for that kind of computing power. Thus an individual cryptocurrency could very easily effectively disappear as performance lags and volatility adds implicit costs, eaten by other cryptocurrencies and more valuable uses for the GPU cycles.

    • U.S. dollar and stocks and bonds are also "imaginary thing without tangible value"

      only works as long as everyone agrees to play the game; they are game tokens

      that said, crytocurrencies are terrible as money: illiquid and hugely volatile. bad solution.

  • MUH TULI^C^C^ BUTTCOINS!

  • This is just the Chinese again, using their crypto-coins to buy presents and moon cakes for the big Mid-Autumn Festival in two weeks.
  • Only the government will tolerate their own fiat currency backed by nothing. Gangsters hate competition.

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