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Bitcoin The Almighty Buck

Bitcoin Crashes as Halving Hype Loses Impetus Over the Weekend (bloomberg.com) 139

Bitcoin appears to be running out of steam just before one of the most anticipated milestones among cryptocurrency enthusiasts. From a report: The largest digital token tumbled over the weekend, declining about 13% to around $8,675. It rebounded to about $8,840 as of 10 a.m. in New York trading on Monday. The decline took place ahead of a closely watched technical event known as its halving, when the rewards miners receive for processing transactions will be cut in half as soon as later today. "It's likely that we're going to see increased volatility through May, with the pandemic, ongoing stimulus measures and the halving," Rich Rosenblum, co-head of trading at crypto market maker GSR, said in an email. "The record open interest for futures and options at multiple exchanges adds to this. The market is in a state of information and position overload, exacerbating the potential for volatile moves."
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Bitcoin Crashes as Halving Hype Loses Impetus Over the Weekend

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  • Probably single dumper. They happen before halving every time. It will definitely be more volatile here soon but that also means risk/reward is higher.
    • by lgw ( 121541 )

      Well, and the surprising quick recovery from the Rona has left currency crash hedges hanging. Bitcoin, gold, and the like are all a bit over-extended right now. Still, if there were any way to buy Bitcoin through a real exchange I would. I guess htere's that one ETF traded on Swedish NASDAQ, but the SEC is being ridiculous about it at this point. I couple years ago that conservatism made sense, but it's clear Bitcoin isn't going to vanish, and isn't even all that volatile as commodities go.

  • it's back up again.

  • The market is in a state of information and position overload

    Cool, I've revised my portfolio accordingly.

  • Tulips (Score:5, Informative)

    by Way Smarter Than You ( 6157664 ) on Monday May 11, 2020 @12:16PM (#60048202)
    Running at less than half it's high of 19k. Still not fungible currency. Still too volatile to be a store of wealth. Still the exact opposite of privacy to use. Still no protection when robbed.

    Why does anyone put money into it? I don't recall.
    • It's an online casino gaming token, nothing more. The casino could be shut down any time, or subject to new laws that drastically change the value of the token overnight, but people play for the thrill.

      • Who exactly can shut down bitcoin? Which country controls bitcoin? You clearly don't understand bitcoin or economics. Your reading may be the issue, or lack thereof.

    • Money laundering. If the bank asks where your sudden windfall came from and you tell them "I just sold a literal boatload of cocaine", you're going to have a bad day. If you tell them "I've been trading bitcoin", everything is fine.
      • If the bank asks where your sudden windfall came from and you tell them "I just sold a literal boatload of cocaine"

        Oddly enough, the IRS (I know you said banks) doesn't care if your income is by illegal means [irs.gov]. So long as you report your income and losses and pay the appropriate taxes, they're happy.
        • by flink ( 18449 )

          They don't promise not to refer you to the FBI or local authorities for investigation if you put Narcotics Trafficker down as your occupation, AFAIK. It's designed to create a catch-22: you either fail to report the illegal income and become guilty of tax evasion, or you effectively confess your crimes.

        • Got in trouble for growing weed many years ago, the biggest fine was for me not having tax stamps on my illegal plants- $5k per plant....can't make that shit up.
        • Bitcoin is an unrealized asset. How does it affect your IRS/Banking statement unless you sell it, in which it becomes a realized asset and is taxed as such. An unrealized asset isn't taxable. If you dig up gold in your back yard, you don't pay tax on the gold, You pay tax when you sell it. Your bank can't handle bitcoin nor does it care if you sold it to get the money.

      • What? It's treated as taxable income just like anything else. What are you smoking? It isn't tax free.

        • I didn't say either one was tax-free, I'm talking about not going to jail for smuggling or money laundering.
        • Bitcoin is not taxable income. It is not a currency. Its a stored asset. DO you pay tax on gold you dig up in your back yard? Not unless you sell it.

        • BITCOIN is not a taxable income. It is considered property. You are taxed on a sale, and only on the sale. you don't profit by owning bitcoin, you profit in selling the asset. Lack of knowledge doesn't seem to prevent your comments from being fully gibberish.

    • It's a relatively convenient way to send money overseas. Not all international banking systems play nice with each other.

      • It's a relatively convenient way to send money overseas. Not all international banking systems play nice with each other.

        If you're headed to an economy whose currency doesn't trade internationally it's probably better to take a suitcase full of tradeable basic staples like dried beans or flour instead of bitcoins.

        • To be fair, if you have a good job overseas, it may be a reasonable way to get money to your sister back in the old country, to support your aging mother.

    • Please direct me to an service that will exchange tulips for USD. Because I can do that all day right now with a dozen bitcoin exchanges. If I lose money in the stock market does it come back? No. Same deal here.

      • > If I lose money in the stock market does it come back? No.

        Actually yes. The Nasdaq today is higher than it was 5 years ago; 5 years ago was higher than 10 years ago, 10 years ago was higher than 15 years ago, etc.

        Over any five year period you'd gain. The sole exception was if you bought in late 1999 - early 2000, it took a bit longer to come back.

        • I should have said if you bought ONLY at the peak, the single worst thing anyone could do. Obviously most people have their investments in their 401k processed every pay day, so they would have bought in 1998, early 1999, etc. In total, they'd be better off after just a few years.

          With the same $ going into their 401k, that would buy more shares when prices were low. So yeah even looking at the five-year period around the worst event in the history in the Nasdaq, you'd still get that money back pret

        • BTC the global cap is higher now than it was five years ago. It is higher than it was 5 years ago as well. In 2010 BTC total cap was roughly 43.7 million. It is now worth 163 billion. There have been highs and lows but where has bitcoin gone and lost value over a 5 or ten year period. In the first quarter of 2020 BTC fell 10 percent which is lower than the losses on the major US Stock indexes.

      • Actual USD that they will wire to an American bank account in a timely fashion? By all means, please share some links.
        Or did you mean Tether, which is sort of like dollars in that it's backed by bland assurances and an unauditable basket of "assets", but very unlike it in that nobody accepts it for goods and services?
      • It's called a flower shop, provided you own a farm.

        There's some down the road a ways.

  • Even a 13% drop is not that huge, and could well have been market manipulation to acquire more Bitcoin cheaply before the halving as anything else.

  • Seems to be this one:
    https://finance.yahoo.com/news... [yahoo.com]

  • Good. (Score:4, Informative)

    by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Monday May 11, 2020 @12:20PM (#60048236)
    It's a stupid waste of electricity. Legalize drugs and prostitution, crack down on ransomeware scams and it goes away.

    I've yet to hear a viable use case for Bitcoin outside of dodgy transactions and money laundering. There is no advantage to it and lots of downsides. I like having my bank deposits insured by the FEC.
    • My problem with Bitcoin is that it's the v1.0 of crypto-currencies. The huge inefficiency with power consumption for transactions to happen (and the long delays for them to complete) makes it pretty unusable as a practical form of payment for day to day purchases.

      That doesn't mean the whole concept is bad though. I'm absolutely convinced that the US dollar is going to implode eventually. The main thing keeping it from happening right now is the fact so many other things world-wide are tied to and dependen

      • Barring some massive, permanent pullback from global trade, I think the dollar will be kept propped up by the need for a global currency of exchange. The US dollar suffices for this because of reasonable transparency and the independence of the Fed as a source of monetary policy and the sheer size of the US economy providing liquidity and convertibility.

        There's really only two other possible candidates -- the Yuan and the Euro. The Yuan is close in terms of economic scale, but not even in the ballpark in

    • Valuable use case: As experiment. As I believe some of the creators mentioned at the start. :)

  • by drnb ( 2434720 ) on Monday May 11, 2020 @12:28PM (#60048294)
    Down 13% is not a crash for Bitcoin. Occasional crashes are more in the down 50-75% range.

    You can't apply stock exchange sort of metrics to Bitcoin. Its volatility is very different.
    • As a currency, it's supposed to have different volatility than a stock... but not more volatility than a stock.

      • by drnb ( 2434720 )

        As a currency, it's supposed to have different volatility than a stock... but not more volatility than a stock.

        Its not a currency. Its an asset. An asset that you can engage in barter transactions with. Which brings in all the requirements of your tax jurisdiction for defining the capital gain/loss on that asset you just traded for a cup of coffee. It is very much like trading some fraction of Apple stock for a coffee. Wallet software really needs to start calculating that to help people file their taxes.

        • Most people are just not paying taxes on their bitcoin cause it's "on a computer". It's illegal, but I'm not sure we're ever going to catch up with them. Then again, bitcoin records are public and the IRS can go back pretty far for failing to disclose

          • by drnb ( 2434720 )
            In 2014 people laughed at me when I reported on my taxes the value of coins mined (and hardware and power expenses) and the gains from coin trading. Treating it all as assets.

            Then the IRS had exchanges provide customer info, including my exchange. I giggled.

            Now some of you may be thinking but my exchange is in a jurisdiction that will not cooperate with the IRS. Note that in 2017 the IRS seized the European servers of a Russian exchange called BTC-e. Not only did they get records they got some of the
            • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

              I think the IRS got over 60% of the coins on BTC-e. I think there is a process where you can ask for them back if you file the proper paperwork.

              Isn't that like the drug dealer calling the police and trying to file a report for someone stealing his 5 kilos of coke?

              • by drnb ( 2434720 )

                I think the IRS got over 60% of the coins on BTC-e. I think there is a process where you can ask for them back if you file the proper paperwork.

                Isn't that like the drug dealer calling the police and trying to file a report for someone stealing his 5 kilos of coke?

                No its more like reporting a robbery where someone stole the cash, winnings from your illegal bookmaker, that you were going to use to buy the coke. "I'd like to report the theft of a tightly rolled wad of cash, two rubber bands and my fingerprints all over it.". :-)

              • No, it's more like calling the IRS and saying "yeah, those coins are mine and I was trying to hide them from you. But in spite of there being no records because I was trying to hide them from you I want to claim them." Then paying your back taxes and fines

            • You probably didn't have to report the value of the coins mined when mined, only when sold. But I have no idea. I would have assumed you "bought" the asset for the electricity and when sold you treated that as a basis. But I'm not an accountant. And I never successfully mined bitcoin, so I never looked into it.

          • BITCOIN is not a currency, it is not taxable. Please stop with misinformation. Is gold taxable if you find a nugget in your back yard? Not until you sell it.
            Bitcoin is not taxable unless you sell convert it/sell it for cash. So the 'on the computer' part you are making fun of is totally uninformed. It isn't illegal, and your comment is flat out incorrect.

    • You can't apply stock exchange sort of metrics to Bitcoin. Its volatility is very different.

      And this is fundamentally why it won't ever be taken seriously.

      • stock market crash 1929, Black Tuesday, black Thursday, Black Friday. The dotcom boom and bust. People would never allow stocks to get manipulated or for them to crash wiping out billions of dollars in customer investment lost in an instant. But nobody would ever take a system that crashes seriously.

  • The halving is an uncertainty, due to the lack of real knowledge what may happen to the price afterwards. Uncertainty brings in selling.
    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      The halving is an uncertainty, due to the lack of real knowledge what may happen to the price afterwards. Uncertainty brings in selling.

      I thought it dropped because a single whale(or group of whales) were dumping $2million worth of bitcoins on an exchange at regular intervals?

  • by drnb ( 2434720 ) on Monday May 11, 2020 @12:48PM (#60048422)
    People need to understand that past patterns don't really apply to current bitcoin, for example what happened during previous halvings. The reason is that the ownership of bitcoins is very different, the trading is very different. Its no longer simply being traded by enthusiastic evangelists. We recently had waves of buying by Wall Street and ordinary consumers. A different community of traders will yield a different set of behaviors.
  • The problem with Bitcoin is the fact that is way too valuable to be used. Its price keeps on doubling so much, that only an idiot would spend it on anything.
    Selling a bitcoins to say buy a car, buy a home, start your own business.... Will be a financial loss. As after you sell it, it price will rise so much that you could have had bought the same for less bitcoins.

    Steady currencies that don't go up too fast. Means that home that you bought with 200,000 us dollars, can be sold for 300,000 in 30 years.
    vs tha

    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      The problem with Bitcoin is the fact that is way too valuable to be used. Its price keeps on doubling so much, that only an idiot would spend it on anything.
      Selling a bitcoins to say buy a car, buy a home, start your own business.... Will be a financial loss. As after you sell it, it price will rise so much that you could have had bought the same for less bitcoins.

      It's gambling. You have to know when to exit the game and be willing to walk away with what you've already won. That's how the house wins: people get greedy and chase the bigger payouts and often go bust. Gotta be willing to walk away with what you have and not get haunted by the "what if".

      • Who exactly is the house in open source blockchain? You're analogy is worse than Stallone in Copland.

    • bitcoins are divisible to satoshi. Do people not purchase anything when the dollar goes up or gold goes up?

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