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Bitcoin The Almighty Buck

Is Bitcoin's Growth Driven By Speculative Investors? (yahoo.com) 130

"Bitcoin is now trading near $18,000, up almost 100% in six months," notes Bloomberg columnist Lionel Laurent, "and it's flirting with an all-time high reached in 2017 (which, given it was followed by an ugly crash, faithful Bitcoiners would rather forget)..." .

But what exacty does that mean? He challenges the notion that Bitcoin is the new wealth-protecting investment like gold, asking "is this really being driven by people seeking protection from a more uncertain world...?"

If anything, Bitcoin looks much more like the stock market on steroids than it does a digital version of gold, which has barely budged since the end of October as confidence about a Covid cure has gradually improved. You can see why hedge fund skeptics like Ray Dalio are dubious of Bitcoin's charms. The cryptocurrency's recent above-average correlation with equities is fine when everything's going up, but not in times of stress: In mid-March, for example, a flight to safety triggered by Covid cut Bitcoin's price in half. A recent Kansas City Fed study comparing bonds, gold and Bitcoin between 1995 and Feb. 2020 found Treasuries behaved "consistently" as a safe haven, gold "occasionally" and Bitcoin "never."

Behind the talk of digital gold is the reality of an erratic, still-speculative asset with the potential for big price swings...

While digital payment firms such as PayPal Holdings Inc. and Square Inc. have launched Bitcoin applications, this price jump is not about people buying cappuccinos. Data from Chainalysis estimates merchants made up only about 1% of crypto activity in North America between mid-2019 and mid-2020, while exchanges accounted for almost 90%... Crypto is still a heady bet on life-changing wealth, not a disruptor of how normal people use money.

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Is Bitcoin's Growth Driven By Speculative Investors?

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  • by Latent Heat ( 558884 ) on Sunday November 22, 2020 @01:40PM (#60754376)

    Does a bear "function" in the woods?

    • Considering that it has built-in price deflation, that's about as deep an analysis that is called for, but for people that didn't know...

      When the supply of new currency continually shrinks, while the economy grows at least as fast as the population, then only speculation will drive the currency exchange rate, and the actual economy will continue to use other currencies. Duh. Bitcoin, and in fact all "cryptocurrencies" that feature a mathematical "mining" feature to grow the supply, have a currency supply th

      • That actually isn't true. BTC is one of the few "mineable" currencies that have such limited supply built into the mining algorithm. Ethereum is often lambasted by BTC maximalists for being so inflationary (there's no real cap on how much ETH can/will be produced via rewards, though Ethereum does have upward-scaling difficulty and the PoS algorithms that go online once Ethereum is no longer "mineable" may actually be deflationary).

        • That actually isn't true. BTC is one of the few "mineable" currencies that have such limited supply built into the mining algorithm.

          The only way you think you're moving away from the criticism with this statement is if you really don't have any clue how important it is to actively manage a fiat currency.

    • If a sky-screamer screams at the sky and nobody hears it, did they make a sound?

    • By definition or by faith?
    • Bitcoin has no inherant value. you can't eat it, you can't paper your walls with it, there is no government that guarantees its worth. By definition its price is speculation.
  • It's my understanding that when writing a headline as a question, there needs to be the possibility that the answer is "no". That's just not the case here.

    • Better call an "editor" and let them know!

      But considering there isn't only one use case, but actually two, perhaps it is the money launderers who are actually driving the price growth, and the speculators are a smaller group that isn't impacting the price substantially?

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Is Bitcoin's Growth Driven By Speculative Investors?

    When was it not? Adding Wall Street and Main Street speculators to a mix of techy speculators would not change this simple fact. Fear Of Missing Out.

    • You gotta be pretty "techy" indeed to think a fiat currency where the rate of new currency can't be increased, and slowly gets lower over time, could be useful for commerce.

      Like, "I don't know algebra, but I like video games" level of Techy.

      • You gotta be pretty "techy" indeed to think a fiat currency where the rate of new currency can't be increased, and slowly gets lower over time, could be useful for commerce. Like, "I don't know algebra, but I like video games" level of Techy.

        Actually, no, its more like a "I don't know history, but I like video games" level of techy to believe that fiat currencies are not useful in commerce.

        By the way, do you have typos in the above? Because fiat absolutely can have new currency introduced, ex the printing press. Also fiat losing value over long time periods does not impede commerce, it hurts savings. Commerce requires a somewhat short term stability, a problem with bitcoin by the way. Its saving where interest cannot keep up where there are

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • ..it's gambling, with a dashy of fraud

    • The difference between investing and gambling is that in gambling some random event happens, and you either win or lose.

      In investing, some random event(s) happen(s) continuously, and you choose when and if to buy or sell. The choosing when is the investing, and is not random. Even where the event, for example the current trading price of an issue, is entirely random. The investing is still not random, because when you choose to buy, or choose to sell, you know the current value and get to make a decision, u

      • In investing, some random event(s) happen(s) continuously, and you choose when and if to buy or sell.

        In actual investing, the events are not random, you can pretty well tell what companies will do well and what will not - sometimes there are random failures, as there are with anything in life, but a great number of things are far more predictable than random.

        It is a crap investment that has no fundamental value,

        This lacks any understanding of what Bitcoin is, or the wider world we live in. Bitcoin is a ver

        • In investing, some random event(s) happen(s) continuously, and you choose when and if to buy or sell.

          In actual investing, the events are not random

          Now look up what the word "random variable" means in the context of statistics, and then note that this is the meaning of "random" that we use in investing.

          I'm making close to 100% per year as a swing trader, so when I say it is a random variable, I'm not saying I don't know anything about the probabilities of different values. It means something different than that.

      • fundamental value

        What do you mean by that? As in, how do you calculate it?

        The financial instrument I'm investing in is entirely detached from the market

        I'm not sure you understand what an ETF is. Are you thinking of an ETN?

  • Don't bother posting, here is a summary of all comments: it is a Ponzi scheme, it is speculation, it is going down to 0, it is not a currency, I'm rich, I'm poor. That's it.
  • I thought everyone knew that Bitcoin was a grift.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Sunday November 22, 2020 @02:03PM (#60754422)
    when Marijuana is finally legal in developed nations. Drugs & money laundering form the backbone of the Bitcoin economy since, well, you can't do anything else with it. The speculators jumped in when they noticed the drugs & money laundering had created a floor. But when drugs are legal there goes at least 1/2 the floor.

    And eventually the cops will get wise to the money laundering. I know it seems like it's been a long time but they're way, way slower than you think.
    • Bitcoin probably funds a lot of shady stuff (ransomware included), so I doubt legal weed is going to upend the Bitcoin economy.

      I've always felt Bitcoin's demise will result from succumbing to the will of the mob. Some other coin will eventually be more stable/easier to turn back into real money/not require insane amounts of electricity for mining (take your pick), and Bitcoin will go the way of MySpace, AIM, Napster, etc.

    • by yarbo ( 626329 )
      Marijuana is far from the only drug. MDMA, LSD, cocaine, methamphetamine, Xanax, heroin, fentanyl, mushrooms, Ketamine all are being sold on darknet markets. There are also hundreds of novel psychoactive substances.
    • when Marijuana is finally legal in developed nations.

      It already is.

      Taxes went up, incarceration went down, the advertising on billboards changed from some bullshit about getting high and eating fried eggs, to ads for weed stores.

      Those were the only notable changes in society.

      And eventually the cops will get wise to the money laundering. I know it seems like it's been a long time

      They seized ~ $1B worth of bitcoin a couple weeks ago, and I read about money laundering networks getting rolled up all the time. Maybe they just don't have any reason to put a sign on the mob's door that says "investigation in progress." Maybe they don't announce how they found out about

    • When MJ becomes legal, that'll be the end of it. It'll be just like smoking. Only dimwits will still smoke. That's what I predicted with smoking, people laughed. Thought I was stupid. Now look at it. You're a dimwit if you smoke today.
    • In fact, cryptocurrencies are far easier to follow than cash. Cash is king for illegal activities. Bitcoin or any crypto need to go through an exhange to have any value. Even with anonymous coin it is a problem. China doesn't use cash anymore because it is hard to track. I think backbone of Bitcoin economy is speculation. You can do trading easily, 24/24 7/7. Stock day trading doesn't make more sense than crypto trading.
    • by Koby77 ( 992785 )

      Drugs & money laundering form the backbone of the Bitcoin economy since, well, you can't do anything else with it

      There are a few other possible uses, 1.) conduct private transactions without government scrutiny or taxation, 2.) store of wealth that isn't subject to government debasement inflation, 3.) can cross international boarders without detection or taxation. While it isn't perfect, and some other assets have advantages that crypto does not (example: physical precious metal ownership does not have a counterparty risk, whereas crypto relies on the continuation of the network; example 2: cash works in the event of

    • Not anymore it doesn't. BTC is easy to track. Using it to exchange in goods/services of dubious legality is a surefire way to get caught. Only criminals that seem to want BTC anymore are the guys pushing ransomware from countries with weak extradition treaties.

  • As noted previously, go here: http://bitcoinity.org/markets [bitcoinity.org]

    Set the horizontal timeline to show "all".

    The purple bars behind the graphs are trading volume. Not that in 2017 there was massive trading and this time there isn't.

    ie. There's no demand, only supply. That's a sure indicator that somebody with lots of bitcoin to sell is trading between sock puppet accounts at elevated prices in order to draw in the suckers (again).

    tldr: They're pumping like mad and preparing to dump.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Nice. This means even if you get suspicious now, you cannot actually get out because there are no buyers. Exactly what I expect is happening, but I had no hard data. You just supplied that. Thanks!

      • Only if you're a wale.

        It's not like they can pick and choose who to buy from, so if you throw a couple bitcoin on the exchange they'll have to buy it.

        • It's not like they can pick and choose who to buy from, so if you throw a couple bitcoin on the exchange they'll have to buy it.

          They'll buy/sell in quantities that make it very likely they'll end up trading between their own accounts.
          .

    • 2017 corresponds to 2021 on the chart. You're looking at the wrong part of the graph.

      • Ooops, typo!

        I meant to type, "...note that in (the bubble of) 2017 there was massive trading and this time there isn't."

    • tldr: They're pumping like mad and preparing to dump.

      I hope so, considering the feds control the exchanges! It will make for entertaining articles in a couple years when they roll these fuckers up.

  • I was inches from buying some for speculative reasons, then discovered the IRS demands to know if you invest in cryptocurrencies; and tax experts speculated it could increase the chance of being audited. I decided the hassle wasn't worth it.

    • I mean, there's no reason bitcoin is different from other speculative investments for tax purposes. I'm not sure why an aboveboard statement you invest in cryptocurrency would increase your chance of getting audited.

      That story is based on the evidence that the IRS is hiring crypto experts to assist with audits and checking crypto claims. It was a huge jump in percentage of employees, but that's because the IRS was flying pretty blind on that front. And they started mailing letters to 10,000 odd people sa

  • What more can be said about BitCoin and its volatile price hikes and crashes that hasn't already been said on here?

    Every time it jumps up 1000$ there is an article about it and all the usual things are said, by those with money invested and those without. I'm not sure any new news has come out to change either sides opinion?

  • Unless they are doing something illegal like insider trading, anyone who invests money in anything is speculating.

    • Putting money into startups is speculation. Putting money into profitable companies who pay a dividend is investment. Most stocks sit somewhere in between, providing dividends, but relying on stock price growth over time to make those dividends worth it.

  • Not any more than any other collectible. Its worth what the next collector will pay for it.

  • This is a classical pump & dump. Requires you to pump until enough dumb people are buying into it and then you can safely dump and laugh at the idiots all day long. If you do this with stocks, you go to prison. Bitcoin is unregulated and even this very, very old scam works nicely because there is an endless supply of morons with money to lose.

    Sure, you _can_ do some ride-along with such a scam, but only if you bough in low. And you need to get out in time to actually be able to sell and that means _befo

    • I'm sorry you missed out. Just an FYI, you still have time to get in so you can stop feeling sorry for yourself.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        Hahaha, thanks, but no thanks. I prefer money that I have to money that I may potentially maybe have if I can get out at exactly the right time.

    • Pump and dump is only illegal if little guys do it with penny stocks ... if you're big enough it's just a legitimate trading strategy.

      https://news.slashdot.org/stor... [slashdot.org]

    • Bitcoin is unregulated

      Absolutely false, at least in the US.

      Bitcoin is an unregistered security. Which are nearly as regulated as registered securities. With a registered security there is a bunch of fraud and other liability resting on the person who registered the security, but if they did everything right and released the correct public information, they're less restricted than an unregistered security.

      The SEC clarified this years ago. It is no different than starting a business and selling "bonds" to the public; there is lo

      • Bitcoin is an unregistered security

        In the US bitcoin is an asset. An unregistered security is a stock not registered with the SEC. The handling of assets, including bitcoin, for US tax purposes is pretty much the same as the handling of stocks (date and basis, date and sale, long/short gain/loss) but securities and assets remain different things.

  • The USD is backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government. Bitcoin is backed by computer nerds popping peanut M&M's.
  • Bitcoin FUD marks the start of bull runs. Buy now to double your money in short order.

  • Majority of crackers, here in Brazil, use Bitcoin to clean dirty money (from scams): I imagine it is also true in almost any part of the world...
  • Based upon the original title: YES bitcoin values are SOLELY based upon speculators. Please disprove me.
  • When has Bitcoin's growth ever not been through speculative hype & bullshit about its potential as an "investment".
    • When has Bitcoin's growth ever not been through speculative hype & bullshit about its potential as an "investment".

      That's more "Greater Fool" scheme not "Ponzi". See Tulip Mania.

  • by Adeptus_Luminati ( 634274 ) on Sunday November 22, 2020 @04:50PM (#60754912)

    I can't believe after 11 years of Bitcoin being around, at near all time highs (after passing through 4+ other bubbles and crashes), after Wallstreet starting to invest in it, after corporations starting to invest in it by the hundreds of millions, when Central Banks are trying to copy it, when mainstream banks are starting to offer exchange services to trade Bitcoin and other cryptos, when dozens of governments in various countries pass laws specifically considering crypto and Bitcoin thus making it legal to buy and trade, when trusts tradeable on wallstreet offer it, when Stock broker companies are all starting to offer trading services for it.... ... there's still piles and piles of idiots around here claiming it's for drug dealers, pedos, etc. Un-F'ing-Believable! That's all I gotta say.

    I'll enjoy selling my Bitcoin to you after it hits $100K/BTC.

    • by Lordfly ( 590616 )

      Er, the banks have all labeled Bitcoin as risky speculative spots to park money, not investment-grade.

    • by austus ( 199520 )

      Yes. At 7 transactions per second, BTC is going to take over the world. Moron.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • 1) Bitcoin is not a "Ponzi Scheme". Ponzi schemes are a particular kind of fraud where you take money from investors and then pay them a return with money from future investors. Ponzi apparently insisted even after he was convicted that this could have gone for forever if the government hadn't interfered. 2) Tulip mania is a myth based on real events. In fact, the bubble burst because there was a surplus of tulip bulbs produced. Sort of standard market theory. 3) Bitcoin does seem to be a case of the grea
    • AFAIK mining also gives you a percentage of the transactions, that's why sometimes the transfer fees go through the roof when the trading volume is too high and other times it's free when there's not many transactions at once.

  • Actually, it's just the Paypal effect. Given anyone with a Paypal account can suddenly trade in cryptocurrencies, it makes it more "mainstream". Thus speculators pretty much saw the influx of new fools, err marks, err, "ivnestors" as an opportunity.

    Just like when people mortgaged their houses the last time Bitcoin jumped, the influx is only temporary and once the Christmas bills come due, the crash will occur as everyone starts bailing out their Bitcoin. Of course, just like people are ill-informed about h

  • I would really like to see which percentage of transactions involving gold actually involves buying cappuccinos. I think it's perfectly fine for a certain currency to be "impractical" for day-to-day transactions; and I think BTC is actually more practical than gold.
  • "Bitcoin is now trading near $18,000, up almost 100% in six months," notes Bloomberg columnist Lionel Laurent.

    And it also crashed at the beginning of the pandemic, then remained stable for a few months before starting to go up [coingecko.com] after Trump lost the USA elections.

    A lot of things crashed/slowed down/stopped at the beginning of this year, stating numbers and percentages for 2019 is sort of meaningless compared the previous years.

  • Just buy some and make money. Much more fun than repeating the same incorrect arguments and watching everyone else get rich.
    • by ebvwfbw ( 864834 )

      I've made a lot of money off of it. I could be wrong, however I think you're nuts if you buy right now. It'll go back down. Whole bunch of people will get hurt again.

      • by vinn01 ( 178295 )

        "Whole bunch of people will get hurt again."

        They won't get hurt, they will get educated. After enough people are educated and there are no more "greater fools", that will be the end of Bitcoin.

        I'm looking forward to a cryptocurrency that is actually a functioning currency.

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