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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum
GLD 368.29+0.6%Nov 7 4:00 PM EST

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To: elmatador who wrote (137180)12/19/2017 4:25:58 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) of 217616
 
re <<Chinese Traders Continue Investments in Bitcoin With a Huge Premium ... >>

elmataroy, you continue to either misunderstand deliberately or otherwise, or simply not being able to begin to be aware, by not able to help so.

(1) here we go, pencil ready, take notes

(1-i) volatility naturally heightens uncertainty and dictates premium level

(1-ii) when the china exchanges were trading, premium there and everywhere naturally reflect volatility and uncertainty

(1-iii) even so, the <<... Chinese investors were purchasing Bitcoin with premiums in the range of $200 to $300 ...>>, in hindsight, is giggling small, especially given the premium since exhibited on the insular s.korean exchanges ... i suspect the reason is reasonable ...

(1-iv) that china is a net net largest bitcoin producer in the world, and a net net exporter of same, and w/ the produce soon then soon to be stop-trade, much like oranges awaiting shipment to market, the premium was actually tiny, 2-300 premium on 5-6,000 underlying bitcoin - gold premium over spot should be so cheap

but yes, per natural scale i can understand how brazilians view 2-300 as Huge, assuming you were endorsing the article you posted as opposed to just passing along a piece of alt-news fluff

(2) With the exchanges now shut down in china, the miners have a harder task to do in order to continue exporting ... they must phone in the code to very trusted counter-parties or cross the borders themselves in person, to HK, Macau, S.Korea etc in order to unload their output, and they are

(3) In the mean time, the shuttered exchanges have gone metastatic and global, in order to serve the main purpose of distribution for the world's largest bitcoin miner. The fact that China shutdown of the exchanges did not lead to permanent bitcoin collapse ought to tell folks in including you that china is not a net buyer of bitcoins but a source. But, then, you are singular.

(4) You have failed to answer the question that matters, how does a china domestic buy bitcoins when there are no operating exchanges in china, and the would-be buyer cannot get funds off-shore? Perhaps you would like to fund the supposed domestic buying on off-shore exchanges by extending credit?

(5) have you met mr satoshi yet :0)

(6) how about kaesor sosei :0))))

(7) btw, below chart is per natural scale :0)))))))))

bloomberg.com

Coal Is Fueling Bitcoin’s Meteoric Rise
December 15, 2017, 10:43 PM GMT+8
Bitcoin has a dirty secret.

The cryptocurrency has wowed markets this year with breakneck gains as investors flocked to an asset that exists only in cyberspace. But the laborious creation of each digital bitcoin by private computer networks has real-world consequences in the form of massive energy use -- including from fuels that cause the most pollution.

Eight 100-meter-long metal warehouses in northern China are a case in point. Bitmain Technologies Ltd. runs a server farm in Erdors, Inner Mongolia, with about 25,000 computers dedicated to solving the encrypted calculations that generate each bitcoin. The entire operation runs on electricity produced with coal, as do a growing number of cryptocurrency “mines” popping up in China.



The global industry’s power use already may equal 3 million U.S. homes, topping the individual consumption of 159 countries, according to the Digiconomist Bitcoin Energy Consumption Index. As more bitcoin is created, the difficulty rate of token-generating calculations increases, as does the need for electricity.

“This has become a dirty thing to produce,” said Christopher Chapman, a London-based analyst at Citigroup Inc.

For an analysis of new bitcoin futures, click here.

Energy has always been part of bitcoin’s DNA. The person credited with creating the currency, identified only as Satoshi Nakamoto, devised the system that awards virtual coins for solving complex puzzles and uses an encrypted digital ledger to track all the work and every transaction. As the market grew from a hobbyist culture in 2009 to a global phenomenon this year, ever-more computing power was needed by large networks.

Bitcoin prices have surged more than 2,000 percent in the past year on some exchanges and touched a record of more than $17,900 on Friday. Cboe Global Markets Inc. began offering bitcoin futures on Dec. 11, reaching $18,850 on the first day of trading. There are other cryptocurrencies, such as ethereum and litecoin, but bitcoin is by far the largest.

China, which gets about 60 percent of its electricity from coal, is the biggest operator of computer “mines” and probably accounts for about a quarter of all the power used to create cryptocurrencies, according to a study of the industry published in April by Garrick Hileman and Michel Rauchs at Cambridge University.



About 58 percent of the world’s large cryptocurrency mining pools were located in China, followed by the U.S. at 16 percent, the researchers said. China is the biggest producer and consumer of coal, and server farms in provinces such as Xinjiang, Inner Mongolia and Heilongjian are heavily reliant upon the fuel.

Expanding DemandEstimates of how much electricity goes into making cryptocurrencies vary widely -- from the output of one large nuclear reactor to the consumption of the entire population of Denmark. But analysts agree that the industry’s power use is expanding rapidly -- especially after a price rally that made bitcoin almost four times more valuable than just three months ago.

Total electricity use in bitcoin mining has increased by 30 percent in the past month, according to Alex de Vries, a 28-year-old blockchain analyst for accounting firm PwC.

“The energy-consumption is insane,” said de Vries, who started the Digiconomist blog to show the potential pitfalls in cryptocurrency. “If we start using this on a global scale, it will kill the planet.”

Some analysts dismiss such claims as alarmist, noting that even the high-end estimates of demand account for only about 0.1 percent of what the world uses. Advances in technology also may make operations more energy efficient.

Still, it’s getting more expensive to produce cryptocurrency as the energy use of the process rises. Miners -- especially the big ones -- will look for the cheapest power to better weather price volatility, according to the Cambridge study. Electricity costs in China, which has surplus capacity of coal-fired generators and vast reserves of the fuel, is well below what consumers pay in the U.S. or Europe.

Harder PuzzlesBitcoin’s algorithm dictates that after a certain number of tokens are created, more work is required for the next batch, said James Butterfill, the head of research and investment strategy at ETF Securities Ltd. in London who has been studying cryptocurrency markets.

Using estimates of electricity prices and the rising speed with which calculations must occur, Butterfill estimates the marginal costs of each bitcoin will more than double from $6,611 in the fourth quarter to $14,175 in the second quarter of 2018. At the start of 2017, the cost was $2,856. With costs rising, there’s a greater risk for miners should prices tumble.

“You’d be hard-pressed to find anywhere where it isn’t profitable to mine,” said Butterfill, who set up computers at his home in England to mine tokens in his spare time and joined a network of 120,000 others to boost processing capacity and returns. “But if you’re investing in a bitcoin rig, you have to look at the long term, and with the volatility as high as it is, it probably still doesn’t make sense to mine bitcoin in Europe.”

Not all cryptocurrency mining is dirty. Computers in Iceland get power from geothermal plants. Even in China, some are clustered around hydroelectric facilities in Sichuan and Yunnan.

‘Bad News’In Austria, Hydrominer IT-Services GmbH put servers inside hydro-power plants. It was the cheapest option, said Michael Marcovici, a company founder, who began mining in 2013.

“Frankly, we didn’t start this as an environmental project,” Marcovici said. “It is bad for bitcoin to have this news all the time about this dirty energy. People don’t want dirty energy to be used. But the problem is, in Europe, the energy is just too expensive.”

— With assistance by Eddie Van Der Walt, Gary Gao, Thomas Biesheuvel, and Hayley Warren
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