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Question: What do you prefer, to buy shares in individual rounds? Or shares in a total mining operation?
Individual rounds. I want to profit on my own! - 4 (33.3%)
Total operation, but I want every btc paid out! - 2 (16.7%)
Total operation, and set aside a % for hardware upgrades! - 6 (50%)
Total Voters: 12

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Author Topic: Question to buyers, want shares in an operation, or individual rounds?  (Read 1122 times)
tripppn
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February 12, 2014, 09:11:17 PM
 #21

@tripppn, In your example both R2 and R3 have overpriced shares. Can you make another example, where shares won't be overpriced (and hardware will be sold at market GH/$ rate)?
How is $30 for 110Ghs overpriced?   In the example if the equipment costs $10k for 50THs that's exactly what the Ghs is being sold at when broken down.  We don't know the cost/ghs is in 4 months so I'm throwing numbers out there.  Would it satisfy you is in R3 The KnC X2 is 100THs for 10k so now everyone is getting 200Ghs for $30??? Of Maybe the X2 is 1PHs  and everyone gets 1 Ths for $30... Who knows.
We don't know what hardware will cost at that time but in my example no one is being overcharged for shares when it's the exact same price as the equipment when it's all added up.  That would just be simple market value.

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drmadison (OP)
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February 12, 2014, 09:14:43 PM
 #22

@tripppn, In your example both R2 and R3 have overpriced shares. Can you make another example, where shares won't be overpriced (and hardware will be sold at market GH/$ rate)?

That's the problem with the way you're thinking about this...
You wouldn't be buying a set number of GH/$
You'd be buying into a mining organization that pays out regular dividends to shareholders, with the goal of dividends + the price you eventually sell the share for being greater than your initial investment. This isn't a short-term 2-3 month deal where you hope to make a bunch of cash and it's over, it's ongoing.
tripppn
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February 12, 2014, 09:20:44 PM
 #23

Crap... this has me thinking and now I want to put it to the test with an S1 to start off with and break it into 10 shares.

“You can't be a real country unless you have a beer and an airline - it helps if you have some kind of football team, or some nuclear weapons, but in the very least you need a beer.”
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drmadison (OP)
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February 12, 2014, 09:29:58 PM
 #24

Crap... this has me thinking and now I want to put it to the test with an S1 to start off with and break it into 10 shares.

I'll be launching something next week Smiley
AlexeyKV
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February 12, 2014, 09:33:42 PM
 #25

@tripppn, In your example both R2 and R3 have overpriced shares. Can you make another example, where shares won't be overpriced (and hardware will be sold at market GH/$ rate)?
How is $30 for 110Ghs overpriced?   In the example if the equipment costs $10k for 50THs that's exactly what the Ghs is being sold at when broken down.  We don't know the cost/ghs is in 4 months so I'm throwing numbers out there.  Would it satisfy you is in R3 The KnC X2 is 100THs for 10k so now everyone is getting 200Ghs for $30??? Of Maybe the X2 is 1PHs  and everyone gets 1 Ths for $30... Who knows.
We don't know what hardware will cost at that time but in my example no one is being overcharged for shares when it's the exact same price as the equipment when it's all added up.  That would just be simple market value.
In first example, $30 for 110 GHs is overpriced because it is 0.27$/GH. At the same time $10k for 50 THs is selling for 0.2$/GH. 0.27$/GH > 0.2$/GH. People will go in another group buy, that offers absolutely same shares/rules, but 150 GHs per 30$ share.

Second example in your post. 100 THs for $10k. Market value 0.1$/GH. R3 now offers 200 GHs per share at price of 30$. It is 0.15$/GH. Which is overpriced, because you can buy 0.1$/GH on market/GB/another mining operation.

Quote
That's the problem with the way you're thinking about this...
You wouldn't be buying a set number of GH/$
You'd be buying into a mining organization that pays out regular dividends to shareholders, with the goal of dividends + the price you eventually sell the share for being greater than your initial investment. This isn't a short-term 2-3 month deal where you hope to make a bunch of cash and it's over, it's ongoing.
But these mining organizations will pop up and offer better deals, because they will have new hardware and won't have old investors (as I mentioned in previous posts). If you can make example, where they won't have better deals (your shares won't be overpriced), it would be appreciated.
drmadison (OP)
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February 12, 2014, 09:39:15 PM
 #26

But these mining organizations will pop up and offer better deals, because they will have new hardware and dont have old investors (as I mentioned in previous posts). If you can make example, where they won't have better deals (your shares won't be overpriced), it would be appreciated.

To use tripppn's example, your "value" changes over time...
In the example he gave that R1 buyer had  $33 for 10GH/s, by the time R3 comes around, that R1 buyer still only ever paid $33, but now he's gotten 110GH/s hashing for him. And when R4 happens he's up even more...all for that single early one-time investment of $33. Even the people who buy in at R3 getting 110GH/s for $33, by the time R4 happens his investment that was already made is increased.

You buy in another group buy and after 3-4 months your investment is done. How much is that share worth as of month 5 or 6? Nothing.

This is admittedly something that has to be explained more clearly, BUT it's something that would provide a lot more long-term stability to investors, and a steady increase in hash rate meaning that your investment continues earning after the first piece of hardware is obsoleted.
AlexeyKV
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February 12, 2014, 09:52:30 PM
 #27

You buy in another group buy and after 3-4 months your investment is done. How much is that share worth as of month 5 or 6? Nothing.
Again, another group buy offers absolutely same rules and reinvestment details as your group buy. These shares worth same as your group buy shares. But they offer 150 GHs for 30$ at start (for comparison to your 110 GHs 30$). They can make it, because they don't have old investors and have access to new hardware.

Then, their R2 shares will rise to 200 GHs, while your R4 shares will rise to 155 GHs.
Then, their R3 shares will rise to 300 GHs, while your R5 shares will rise to 250 GHs. Another company pop up with 30$ for 350 GHs shares.

It's just the example, but you should get the point. These problems you could meet in future and come to the point where you couldn't open new rounds.
drmadison (OP)
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February 12, 2014, 09:56:46 PM
 #28

You buy in another group buy and after 3-4 months your investment is done. How much is that share worth as of month 5 or 6? Nothing.
Again, another group buy offers absolutely same rules and reinvestment details as your group buy. These shares worth same as your group buy shares. But they offer 150 GHs for 30$ at start (for comparison to your 110 GHs 30$).

Then, their R2 shares will rise to 200 GHs, while your R4 shares will rise to 155 GHs.
Then, their R3 shares will rise to 300 GHs, while your R5 shares will rise to 250 GHs. Another company pop up with 30$ for 350 GHs shares.

It's just the example, but you should get the point. These problems you could meet in future and come to the point where you couldn't open new rounds.

Basically your argument of why this won't work is because someone else could offer the exact same thing, but make it a better deal somehow?
Isn't that true of ANY group buy anywhere, where someone else could sell the same hardware cheaper?
AlexeyKV
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February 12, 2014, 10:04:39 PM
 #29

You buy in another group buy and after 3-4 months your investment is done. How much is that share worth as of month 5 or 6? Nothing.
Again, another group buy offers absolutely same rules and reinvestment details as your group buy. These shares worth same as your group buy shares. But they offer 150 GHs for 30$ at start (for comparison to your 110 GHs 30$).

Then, their R2 shares will rise to 200 GHs, while your R4 shares will rise to 155 GHs.
Then, their R3 shares will rise to 300 GHs, while your R5 shares will rise to 250 GHs. Another company pop up with 30$ for 350 GHs shares.

It's just the example, but you should get the point. These problems you could meet in future and come to the point where you couldn't open new rounds.

Basically your argument of why this won't work is because someone else could offer the exact same thing, but make it a better deal somehow?
Isn't that true of ANY group buy anywhere, where someone else could sell the same hardware cheaper?
Yes, they can and will sell shares/hardware cheaper because they dont have old investors and have access to the new hardware. It's hidden trap, that will need to be passed somehow. Look at tripppn example. Try to make any other example. In most examples you will see how people at the start will have most profit, while people at the end will buy overpriced shares.
tripppn
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February 12, 2014, 10:12:01 PM
 #30

I'm trying to figure out where I screwed up.

R1: 3Ths for $10000 = $3.33/gh  300 shares 10Gh each $33.33/share
R2: 10Ths for $10000 = $1/gh  $5000 RIF + $5000 raises by selling 150 shares at $33.33 each 13000GHs/450shares = 28Gh/share $1.17/gh
Hmmm...  
R2 revised "The Complicated Way":  $5k from R1 RIF money and $5k from 150 300 new shares at $33 $16 in R2 money each round gets 5Ths to split so R1 members now have  26Ghs/share and R2 members now have 33Ghs 16Ghs/share.
Double Hmmm...



I think I need to go back to 10th grade to understand but I think there's a way you can structure the number of new shares and the cost of each new share to balance everything out.

EDIT:
R2 Revise again "Te easy way": sell 192 shares at $26 each and now everyone has 26GHs.
Done!!! Take that Mr. 10 grade math teacher guy!!!  LOL

“You can't be a real country unless you have a beer and an airline - it helps if you have some kind of football team, or some nuclear weapons, but in the very least you need a beer.”
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drmadison (OP)
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February 12, 2014, 10:19:56 PM
 #31

Simpler version (example only, not saying this is definitely happening if you're one of my R1 buyers!)

Round 1 bought shares at 0.1btc for 10GH/s

I'm about to launch round 2, let's say it's 0.09btc for 10GH/s

Total hash rate doubled, so did the number of shares, it breaks even.
Round 1 people paid more for shares but they also got additional payouts before round 2 happened so they're happy, and both groups know that even of either machine goes down, during that downtime they're still earning SOMETHING.

Now as  upgrades are purchased with the upgrade fund (in the option 3 scenario) that estimated GH/share (10 to start) goes up, but new shares are generally always sold at a reasonable rate for the time.

The shares that came before you and come after you are added insurance and nothing gets too tricky until that first round of hardware goes obsolete.

At that time, the hope is the resell value of that hardware (it would be non-0) plus whatever's in the upgrade fund buys more hash rate, almost definitely greater than what the now-obsolete hardware was providing and all existing shareholders gain hashing power, without the "being bogged down by previous shareholders" issue that seems to be your concern.
AlexeyKV
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February 12, 2014, 11:10:44 PM
 #32

I'm trying to figure out where I screwed up.

R1: 3Ths for $10000 = $3.33/gh  300 shares 10Gh each $33.33/share
R2: 10Ths for $10000 = $1/gh  $5000 RIF + $5000 raises by selling 150 shares at $33.33 each 13000GHs/450shares = 28Gh/share $1.17/gh
Hmmm...  
R2 revised "The Complicated Way":  $5k from R1 RIF money and $5k from 150 300 new shares at $33 $16 in R2 money each round gets 5Ths to split so R1 members now have  26Ghs/share and R2 members now have 33Ghs 16Ghs/share.
Double Hmmm...



I think I need to go back to 10th grade to understand but I think there's a way you can structure the number of new shares and the cost of each new share to balance everything out.

EDIT:
R2 Revise again "Te easy way": sell 192 shares at $26 each and now everyone has 26GHs.
Done!!! Take that Mr. 10 grade math teacher guy!!!  LOL

Good job Smiley You passed "earlier" obstacle. There is exactly only 1 number of shares per situation, where you can balance single round to make it at least the same as other ppl will offer. Too many things should match. And it should run with organizer with good math.

Now compare it with option #1 + same reinvestment. Add "5Ths for 5000$" machine in market (same $/gh rate).
..
Exactly the same Wink Both rounds have 26 GHs per share. But now you can open rounds with any ammount of shares and any hardware. And you don't need math skills to balance everything out each time.

Back to option #3. What happens if hardware broke? Or became inefficient to mine (high W/GH) and can only be sold under market $/GHs rate. How to balance everything out? Somebody should pay for it.. New shareholders (overpriced shares) or old shareholders (steal from RIF) or some poor guy on eBay, who has bad knowledge of btc hardware or it should go from organizer wallet.. Which path will you go?

People in later rounds will buy shares, that include obsolete gear. With absolutely no better sides compared to other GBs or option #1 + reinvestment.
tripppn
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February 12, 2014, 11:20:53 PM
 #33

Broken gear get's sent back to the manufacturer for a replacement if it's unrepairable and during the downtime the loss of hash rate would be shared among all shareholders until it is repaired or replaced by the manufacturer. "Obsolete" gear can be sold on ebay usually for more then market price /gh I believe because people on ebay are either dumb or ok with the paying a bit more because they can buy it easily with fiat. The proceded for the sale gets added to the RIF meaning less shares would need to be sold for the next gen gear and that sale benefits all current share holders. 

“You can't be a real country unless you have a beer and an airline - it helps if you have some kind of football team, or some nuclear weapons, but in the very least you need a beer.”
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AlexeyKV
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February 12, 2014, 11:43:21 PM
 #34

Broken gear get's sent back to the manufacturer for a replacement if it's unrepairable and during the downtime the loss of hash rate would be shared among all shareholders until it is repaired or replaced by the manufacturer. "Obsolete" gear can be sold on ebay usually for more then market price /gh I believe because people on ebay are either dumb or ok with the paying a bit more because they can buy it easily with fiat. The proceded for the sale gets added to the RIF meaning less shares would need to be sold for the next gen gear and that sale benefits all current share holders.  
I don't see any better sides compared to option #1 + reinvestment. It has absolutely same benefits, as you mentioned. But if you buy shares of ants hardware and in 4 years they broke down and Bitmine got shut down/bought by another company/etc, then you will pay for your buying. Not somebody else, who has no idea, why he should pay for your buying.
drmadison (OP)
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February 13, 2014, 12:12:00 AM
 #35

Broken gear get's sent back to the manufacturer for a replacement if it's unrepairable and during the downtime the loss of hash rate would be shared among all shareholders until it is repaired or replaced by the manufacturer. "Obsolete" gear can be sold on ebay usually for more then market price /gh I believe because people on ebay are either dumb or ok with the paying a bit more because they can buy it easily with fiat. The proceded for the sale gets added to the RIF meaning less shares would need to be sold for the next gen gear and that sale benefits all current share holders.  
I don't see any better sides compared to option #1 + reinvestment. It has absolutely same benefits, as you mentioned. But if you buy shares of ants hardware and in 4 years they broke down and Bitmine got shut down/bought by another company/etc, then you will pay for your buying. Not somebody else, who has no idea, why he should pay for your buying.

Having a group buy that reinvests a portion of earnings, but doesn't take on any new buyers after the round ends is impossible - no hardware generates enough revenue on its own to purchase additional hardware while still making any significant payouts to the shareholders.
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