Don't see yet...
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Payments pending?
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You can only spend btc ones.... this is also the case voor bankers , who can spend a dollar multple times , because of leverage So when you dump you can not buy back bitcoins at lower price , nodbody will sell you bitcoins unless you manage to buy back your own. but changhes you can de that are zero. So, if I get your point right, those BTC exchanges are fake?
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If a big sell happens on one exchange the price falls on that exchange, if it is significant enough then tranders will see the cheaper bitcoins on that exhanange and buy them. the price will always tend to equalise between the exchanges. Its called arbitrage. (except Mtgox is a bit different because you can't easily sell for US$) It may work if the exchanges are independent and there're market makers on them. Are there any MM's on BTC exchanges, lol?
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gentleman, gentleman, i have bitcoins.......... however this is the reason why i am not buying more bitcoins at this price point, and i am therefore bearish
If you are really bearish, why not sell all those bitcoins you have... How come? Maybe, you just don't know - as most of us?
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BTC will eventually fail and go to $0... There's my bearish input.
Ok then It might very well never go below 300 again Was that your bullish input?
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why only 8, in Chinese, 6 and 9 are also for luck and fortune
I remeber striking a deal with somebody in China... There were exactly 8 clauses in the contract. Then we removed one, they agreed and divided another in two
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I hope that people trying to induce panic selling are losing profits with each attempt. If no one sells off their coin then how will it help them? They will have to buy back, and most likely at a higher price then they dumped at if other people jump in and take advantage of the amount they dump on the exchanges.
Why not consider the idea that the drive up was actually manipulated? It seems to me more logical and less risky taking into account that Bitcoin is currently "on the rise"
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I am actually somewhat surprised that there has not been more sell offs when there is dumping going on. There seems to be a pattern of someone (or group) dumping coin on all of the exchanges at the same time, probably with hopes of making other people panic and sell off coin so that they can pick up more cheaply
This pattern can be explained by there being only one "real" exchange, all others simply mirroring the trends of this "master" one...
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Я был весьма удивлён, когда мне стали приходить (после включения двухфакторной авторизации) СМС с кодами доступа от Coinbase Надеюсь, они не спишут с меня часть счёта...
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..... dumb ass
That's all you're able to say, dude?
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Also btce follows gox moves exactly. So all you need to do there in order to trade is watch clarkmoody. On other exchanges it's not quite as easy.
Aha, you also need liquidity, read a fool who will buy from you/sell to you (provided you're not the one in the first place)
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No, I hold through the whole upswing. I spend my days thinking about all of the money I am making and how it will change my life.
When it goes down I just have to wait until it levels out to know when to buy back in.
But I can't help closing the position if it ever gets profitable. Though not in BTC but it doesn't really make any difference...
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Don't worry, the bubble has only just started.
To swell?
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Long live the chinese superstitions Bitcoin is soon going to turn out to be a revolution Not anytime soon (if ever at all). Currently, Bitcoin is nothing more than an eye-catcher, ill-suited for any real purpose
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Payment has arrived, this time it took 4 days...
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I trade on BTC-E. There is lower liquidity there, generally, than Gox or Stamp, and panic usually sets in pretty fast there. It can make for a nice quick BTC profit on days like today.
The best action is on BTC-E, fast falling and fast climbing, generally faster the other exchanges. the place rocks Low liquidity usually means that the execution of an order may take too long (and there is too wide a spread), so it may happen that when you actually should buy, you will instead be selling and vice versa...
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8 isn't always good.
Nick Leeson, the rogue trader who destroyed Baring's bank -- also relied on the number 8.
The account number that he used was "88888".
You should be an authentic Chinese to get luck with 8's...
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I'd like to point out the bubble that burst back in april. It didn't just fall from $266 to $200... it literally tanked. Now I'd like to draw your attention to the right side of this chart... see something similar?
It doesn't look like a bubble at all, rather a price spike carefully managed and operated (for sure, somebody earned a huge deal of money)
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In Russia, the exchange trades you.
In Soviet Russia, lol...
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