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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: Maurice Winn who wrote (170412)4/18/2021 9:05:30 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
marcher

   of 217588
 
If I mark to market right now I am 48% allocated to crypto (BTC, BTCC, GBTC, COIN, and Casper)

Ray counsels 20%, so am overweight. Of course Casper is just the life-blood cells of an App.

It boggles my mind that MSFT missed crypto; like what were its geniuses doing at work? improving Word program so that it might do some of WordPerfect's tasks neater?

Utility tokens, whilst can be used as money, is just a manifestation of utility software that happens to be fungible.

If Word and Microsoft's Office suite of programs can be traded like packs of cigarettes in jail, the software can also be 'alt-money'. Of course, generally software are unlimited in quantity and therefore constrained in price.

In the meantime the narrative changing ... next they are going to tell us that masks and vaccination would guard against criminal use of cash.
“That’s in fact why criminal use of Bitcoin has gone down. It’s been estimated recently that [in] criminal cases around the world, 1% or 1.5% use Bitcoin, and that number in the last 5-9 months has gone down to under 1%. Because actually, using Bitcoin for crime is a terrible idea because you can go to the publicly accessible blockchain. It’s completely transparent and they track down the criminals, so the criminals are not using Bitcoin. They’re using cash, or they might be using gold. It’s much more fungible.”

dailyhodl.com

Longtime Bitcoin Skeptic Ray Dalio Recommends Allocating 20% of Portfolio to BTC: Report

Longtime Bitcoin bull Max Keiser says that gold has one single advantage over the world’s leading crypto asset by market cap.

In a new interview with Daniela Cambone of Stansberry Research, the Wall Street veteran concedes that, despite being a vocal Bitcoin advocate, gold is superior to Bitcoin in that it is a malleable good that retains its properties while also shapeshifting and providing anonymity to its holder.

“The one attribute that gold has that Bitcoin doesn’t at the moment is fungibility. Gold is fungible to an extent that Bitcoin is not. Fungibility meaning you can melt down your gold and recast it in some other different form and it maintains its integrity as gold and it’s completely anonymous. It’s completely fungible. Bitcoin, because it is digital, because it is a public blockchain, because it’s transparent, you don’t have the same fungibility.”

By traditional economics definitions, Bitcoin is not 100% fungible because of how the blockchain allows you to see the history of each coin, unlike gold, which can take an entirely new form after being melted down. According to Keiser, the lack of confidentiality on the Bitcoin blockchain is likely the reason why criminal activity using BTC has drastically decreased, with most criminals preferring cash or other assets.

“That’s in fact why criminal use of Bitcoin has gone down. It’s been estimated recently that [in] criminal cases around the world, 1% or 1.5% use Bitcoin, and that number in the last 5-9 months has gone down to under 1%. Because actually, using Bitcoin for crime is a terrible idea because you can go to the publicly accessible blockchain. It’s completely transparent and they track down the criminals, so the criminals are not using Bitcoin. They’re using cash, or they might be using gold. It’s much more fungible.”

Ex-Central Intelligence Agency director Michael Morell recently published a letter suggesting that criminal activity is in fact flowing away from the Bitcoin blockchain and into Anonymity-Enhanced Cryptocurrencies such as Monero (XMR).

“Based on our research, I have come to believe that if there was one financial ecosystem for bad actors to use that would maximize law enforcement’s chances of identifying them and their illicit activities, it would be blockchain.”

Disclaimer: Opinions expressed at The Daily Hodl are not investment advice. Investors should do their due diligence before making any high-risk investments in Bitcoin, cryptocurrency or digital assets. Please be advised that your transfers and trades are at your own risk, and any loses you may incur are your responsibility. The Daily Hodl does not recommend the buying or selling of any cryptocurrencies or digital assets, nor is The Daily Hodl an investment advisor. Please note that The Daily Hodl participates in affiliate marketing.
Featured Image: Shutterstock/Yevhen Tarnavskyi/Angelatriks
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