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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Haim R. Branisteanu who wrote (166950)1/11/2021 5:00:22 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217879
 
Re <<never understood the logic behind BTC and I do not now - after all is solving some formulas>>

... am certain you know it. It is a mechanism for transfer of wealth, like trading sardines, gold, and such same.

As of just now I off-loaded another 10% of the loot, IOW I am down to 10% of what I aggregated earlier on, and GBTC has been good for me that lucked out to have been frightened out of 90% of my position at peak and near peak. The last 10% is LTBH, and shall re-entering at lower numbers. Question remains “how low?”

I do not know whether the bull is taking respite or dying. I suspect respite. Too young still.





The bears are now having fun even as I cannot imagine anyone crazy enough to short BTC ...

bloomberg.com

Did Bitcoin’s Bears Have It Right All Along?

The price of the world’s best-known cryptocurrency is taking investors for a wild ride in 2021.

Bloomberg Opinion
January 12, 2021, 1:41 AM GMT+8



Real or not real?

Photographer: Ina Fassbender/AFP via Getty Images

Bloomberg Opinion provides commentary on business, economics, politics, technology and markets.
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2020 was a terrible year for a lot of things. Yet Bitcoin boomed, rising from less than $5,000 in March to about $29,000. Despite the growing chorus of caution warning that the bubble was about to burst, there has been no shortage of fearless investors happy to take on the risk: On Friday, the price of the cryptocurrency almost reached $42,000, before beginning a stunning slide that pushed Bitcoin down as much as 21% to around $30,000. Signs of a bust, however, have hardly been scarce. Is Bitcoin unsustainable? Or is it inevitable?

It Has a Scarcity Problem: “The success of cryptocurrencies tends to eat itself. As the value of the asset class rises, the shifts away from more conventional investments needed to provoke price spikes get larger and larger.” — David FicklingUnrealistic Expectations Abound: “The more utopian scenarios for crypto, whether proponents realize it or not, rely on the notion that crypto remains simultaneously fringe and mainstream.” — Tyler CowenHedge Fund Boomers Are Behind the Boom: “What lures the ‘smart’ money to Bitcoin as a trade is the very thing that makes it such a poor currency and an unreliable store of value in times of panic: It’s an illiquid, artificially scarce and volatile commodity whose price is driven by extreme sentiments of greed and fear.” — Lionel Laurent and Mark GilbertBut It Still Doesn’t Have Any Intrinsic Value: “Amid ridiculous volatility, some patterns are emerging. Bitcoin continues to make money for those with the gall and timing to take advantage.” — John Authers

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

To contact the author of this story:
Bloomberg Opinion at davidshipley@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Mike Nizza at mnizza3@bloomberg.net

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