btw. i sold major portion, im now 80/20 (usd/btc)
Some of yours coins are belonging to me now. :-) And mine You are welcome Thanks for a nice xmas And this is why nobody should listen to anybody for trading advice on this forum. It's great that some people get lucky and make profits, and that experienced traders use volatility to their advantage. It creates market depth, which is a good thing. I'm probably preaching to the choir, but there are sharks in the water and most noobs are armed with little more than a leaky inner tube Now what I'd like to see are traders who brag about their bad trades. That would be entertaining, and sobering to newbies who think its easy to "double their stash".
|
|
|
Lol Edward is pissed that he actually had BTC back in 2011..... and he's still at a loss! fucking LOL to you my friend
I don't understand how ANYONE with a brain could have 2011 BTC's and still be in a losing position. That type of person shouldn't be allowed to touch their own monies...plain and simple. But I guess if your investing goal is to "break even", then that right there tells us your starting point, LOL. I sure hope he has a few. You do have to understand about sentiment surrounding these massive, logarithmic price movements. There are always those who can't see the forest through the trees, and cannot imagine a higher price than today, or this week. It was the same when Bitcoin was $10, and will be if it reaches $10,000.
|
|
|
I'm partially in, having invested a percentage of my savings, some credit cards, and subsequent extra monthly income. When I first read about Bitcoin in April, I was immediately hooked and was glued to my computer for a week learning about it. I had to get invested somehow. My method of acquiring coins, however, is a bit of a roundabout story...
Back in May, I bought thousands of dollars worth of ASIC equipment in bitcoins, thinking it would be a brilliant idea to build miners based on an unfinished open-source project with chips that didn't exist yet. It was risky. At that time Bitcoin had just crashed from an ATH of $266 to $60. It then stabilized around $80-$130, which is when I bought most of my coins to pay for the hardware. Back then, GPU mining was still profitable and ASICS were just arriving on the scene. If we could get the chips and finish the board design on time, we would be second only to Avalon in having working ASIC miners. Those of us with big mining plans were praying for a BTC valuation of $100-$200 toward the end of the year, and certainly none of us would have predicted a valuation of over $500, much less $1000.
Long story short, the ASIC chips we were supposed to receive were sold out the back door, the Klondike board didn't get completed in time, difficulty soared far beyond predictions, and most of us ended up with chip refunds in bitcoins. Thank god for that. I personally lost a percentage of my initial investment and was pretty depressed about it for a few weeks, that is until the price run-up to $1200, where I watched my wallet grow to an amount of fiat I had never seen before.
While I regret my decision to get into mining, I don't regret the coins I bought in the process and I don't regret the excitement of being involved with such a game changing technology. If I hadn't, I'd have likely delayed buying so many bitcoins in May to meet deadlines and would have far fewer right now.
|
|
|
Merry Christmas gentlemen, singing a song for you all.
1BUD95eSZv6ariYDkcP59xMBBf6ECDktYm
|
|
|
Also, I'm being cautious in regards to tax obligations. US citizens who are trading willy nilly, and not keeping good records may well find themselves in a very unfortunate position in the future. The tax trouble could be worse if you're using foreign exchanges. And it could especially be bad if you're cashing out a lot, using the money, and not holding a good portion in reserve.
Until we get something definitive from the IRS, I'm going to try to make the case for long term capital gains, and to safely do that I'm keeping the vast majority of my coins off exchanges and at addresses only I (and a few trusted people) have control over.
Good luck to anyone in the US recklessly short term trading/cashing out noticeable sums of money using foreign exchanges without any thought for accounting and tax obligations.
Any US transfer amount over $10,000 is required to be reported to the IRS by the bank. So if you're cashing out like a boss, they already know.
|
|
|
Day Traders Bible by Richard Wykoff. It's available as a free pdf online.
|
|
|
Ahh so much lolz... thanks for that!
|
|
|
Truth is nobody knows. Whatever you do, don't listen to anybody on this forum.
|
|
|
Massive buys on Gox. Something's up.
|
|
|
Picked up a large amount of BTC that would otherwise have hit the market, at the CNY rate.
Its not very difficult to bring large amounts of USD into China on a private plane. I have a close relationship with my A&P.
In case anyone's wondering, an A&P is an aircraft mechanic. I thought he was referring to the discount supermarket chain. Playing the finale of Bruckner Symphony #1 in your honor, Loaded. Nice job.
|
|
|
Care to explain wtf is overstock.com to an European fellow that never heard about them before?
Typical forum member, why research it myself and get real answers, when I can ask manipulators, schemers, and total schmucks... a picture will always transport the message. say to him that the man inside the ellipse will be he after the adaption of Bitcoin by Overstock next year. I think I see Edward50 back by the radio tower.
|
|
|
second half of 2014 though, hopefully a lot more important things would have happened by then
True, but it's a glimpse of things to come.
|
|
|
Personally I think the Overstock.com news is being underplayed. Those of us from the US realize how big it is, and it may encourage other retailers to jump on board to remain competitive.
|
|
|
1, 4 & 6 hours charts looking awfully bullish.
Weeee there we go while I was writing!!
|
|
|
Anyone who bothered to educate themselves on Bitcoin, would know that it faces years of opposition from governments and federal banking systems. That's the *entire* reason it was created. It's going to get banned, outlawed, and fought every step of the way, because it is designed to take power away from governments and banks. No. Watch the Senate hearing on Bitcoin. All the regulatory agencies were heard from. FBI: Bitcoin doesn't look like a problem for us; we can trace it. FinCen: Register with us and we don't have any problems. Secret Service: We're seeing Bitcoin-related crime, and it looks like regular crime. SEC: We'll go after anybody who tries the usual investment scams. (Like Trendon Shavers). DEA: The big drug dealers aren't using Bitcoin. The U.S. Government doesn't care about Bitcoin one way or the other. It's just another asset class. All the usual laws apply, from taxes to fraud. Don't forget the Senator who announced that he would be making a phone call after the first recess, coincidentally right after fincen gave its green light.
|
|
|
It's pretty funny to watch an entire thread of that shit, actually. There must be like 5 people controlling 20 accounts. BTW I have only one account and yes I do sometime come here to make fun out of some users here, but this doesn't make me a 100% troll, most of the time I post really informative posts or call it my point of view, if you do not like my point of view than move on there is nothing to see here.... Why did you see a need to buy an account? Ok you make your case. Sock puppets tend to quote themselves. Once you use the ignore button liberally on questionable accounts this becomes patently obvious. So when you quote them more than a few times you go on the naughty list. I just get annoyed at traders who post low value material solely to drive market sentiment in their favor. Grow a pair and stand behind your trade, or change it. This is a house of learned men, not your personal echo chamber to manipulate the market.
|
|
|
Another wedge (not entirely finished) - what bitcoin will do with it this time? Rising wedges are supposedly bearish right? Not unless it breaks through the trend line.
|
|
|
Did you buy your account? Have you not seen the exact same thing posted a gazillion times, over and over? Have you not ignored him yet? When not trolling he's quoting other trolls/sock puppets. It's pretty funny to watch an entire thread of that shit, actually. There must be like 5 people controlling 20 accounts.
|
|
|
There's a high likelihood that "Satoshi Nakamoto" is a group of people and the pseudonym doesn't belong to one single person.
Plus - if he was ever going to come out from under his bed - it wouldn't be to sign a message to you.
What makes it a high likelihood? I know it's possible that it isn't just one person, but haven't seen any high evidence for it. Multiple news outlets have done research and all of the potential "Satoshi Nakamoto(s)" were groups of people. It'd be too difficult for one person to create this - proficiency in networking, programming, security, economics, etc... And if one person did do it, it would take years. It seems more likely "Satoshi Nakamoto" is a pseudonym for multiple people. Which news outlets? He might've been working on Bitcoin for years before he released it. I'd think it'd be harder to keep ahold of all Satoshi's coins if it was a group of people as opposed to one. Good point. All those old wallets with thousands of coins would be mighty tempting right now.
|
|
|
|