dree12 (OP)
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August 16, 2012, 09:44:52 PM Last edit: August 20, 2012, 12:25:04 AM by dree12 |
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RyNinDaCleM
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August 16, 2012, 10:56:24 PM |
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Blockchain.info All-time 7-day Average Market Cap, 2012-08-16 I'm going to take snapshots of this frequently, because I suspect that we're surpassing the record high (back in June 2011) soon, at least well before either market cap (non-averaged) or price will. It'll be an interesting milestone for Bitcoin. Is this just the currently available coins? if so, that would explain why we would pass June '11 cap., without the price passing the $31.90 high. We have nearly Three-million more coins than back then. On a side note, looks like a correction is due!
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dree12 (OP)
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August 16, 2012, 10:58:43 PM |
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Blockchain.info All-time 7-day Average Market Cap, 2012-08-16 I'm going to take snapshots of this frequently, because I suspect that we're surpassing the record high (back in June 2011) soon, at least well before either market cap (non-averaged) or price will. It'll be an interesting milestone for Bitcoin. Is this just the currently available coins? if so, that would explain why we would pass June '11 cap., without the price passing the $31.90 high. We have nearly Three-million more coins than back then. Yes. It's more accurate because it factors in the Bitcoin money supply hyperinflation. Even more accurate would be to factor in USD money supply inflation/deflation, but that is very small or even negative.
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TTBit
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August 17, 2012, 12:09:11 AM |
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The issue I have with 'bitcoin market cap' is that the inflation rate is known. We all know (generally) how many bitcoins there will be on any specific date in the future. When considering the market cap of bitcoin, I use 20m as a ballpark figure. $50/btc will be $1B cap and quite the milestone.
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good judgment comes from experience, and experience comes from bad judgment
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sunnankar
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August 17, 2012, 12:28:04 AM |
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The issue I have with 'bitcoin market cap' is that the inflation rate is known. We all know (generally) how many bitcoins there will be on any specific date in the future. When considering the market cap of bitcoin, I use 20m as a ballpark figure. $50/btc will be $1B cap and quite the milestone.
A more important issue I have with the 'bitcoin market cap' is the deflation rate. My best guess puts it around 1.5m bitcoins. That would make the previous record market cap at $101m=(((149m/31.9)-1.5m)*31.9). The current market cap would be about $110.7m=((9.7-1.5)*13.5). Thus, it appears we are at a new all-time high in terms of intrinsic value (Yes, I know the term has all types of issues).
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dree12 (OP)
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August 17, 2012, 12:38:07 AM |
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The issue I have with 'bitcoin market cap' is that the inflation rate is known. We all know (generally) how many bitcoins there will be on any specific date in the future. When considering the market cap of bitcoin, I use 20m as a ballpark figure. $50/btc will be $1B cap and quite the milestone.
A more important issue I have with the 'bitcoin market cap' is the deflation rate. My best guess puts it around 1.5m bitcoins. That would make the previous record market cap at $101m=(((149m/31.9)-1.5m)*31.9). The current market cap would be about $110.7m=((9.7-1.5)*13.5). Thus, it appears we are at a new all-time high in terms of intrinsic value (Yes, I know the term has all types of issues). Bitcoin's money supply is hyperinflating, not deflating. USD happens to be deflating, but at such a low rate it doesn't really stack up.
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notme
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August 17, 2012, 12:49:37 AM |
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The issue I have with 'bitcoin market cap' is that the inflation rate is known. We all know (generally) how many bitcoins there will be on any specific date in the future. When considering the market cap of bitcoin, I use 20m as a ballpark figure. $50/btc will be $1B cap and quite the milestone.
A more important issue I have with the 'bitcoin market cap' is the deflation rate. My best guess puts it around 1.5m bitcoins. That would make the previous record market cap at $101m=(((149m/31.9)-1.5m)*31.9). The current market cap would be about $110.7m=((9.7-1.5)*13.5). Thus, it appears we are at a new all-time high in terms of intrinsic value (Yes, I know the term has all types of issues). Bitcoin's money supply is hyperinflating, not deflating. USD happens to be deflating, but at such a low rate it doesn't really stack up. He's referring to lost/destroyed coins.
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dree12 (OP)
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August 17, 2012, 01:45:47 AM |
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The issue I have with 'bitcoin market cap' is that the inflation rate is known. We all know (generally) how many bitcoins there will be on any specific date in the future. When considering the market cap of bitcoin, I use 20m as a ballpark figure. $50/btc will be $1B cap and quite the milestone.
A more important issue I have with the 'bitcoin market cap' is the deflation rate. My best guess puts it around 1.5m bitcoins. That would make the previous record market cap at $101m=(((149m/31.9)-1.5m)*31.9). The current market cap would be about $110.7m=((9.7-1.5)*13.5). Thus, it appears we are at a new all-time high in terms of intrinsic value (Yes, I know the term has all types of issues). Bitcoin's money supply is hyperinflating, not deflating. USD happens to be deflating, but at such a low rate it doesn't really stack up. He's referring to lost/destroyed coins. That's dwarfed by created coins at this rate.
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notme
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August 17, 2012, 01:56:30 AM |
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The issue I have with 'bitcoin market cap' is that the inflation rate is known. We all know (generally) how many bitcoins there will be on any specific date in the future. When considering the market cap of bitcoin, I use 20m as a ballpark figure. $50/btc will be $1B cap and quite the milestone.
A more important issue I have with the 'bitcoin market cap' is the deflation rate. My best guess puts it around 1.5m bitcoins. That would make the previous record market cap at $101m=(((149m/31.9)-1.5m)*31.9). The current market cap would be about $110.7m=((9.7-1.5)*13.5). Thus, it appears we are at a new all-time high in terms of intrinsic value (Yes, I know the term has all types of issues). Bitcoin's money supply is hyperinflating, not deflating. USD happens to be deflating, but at such a low rate it doesn't really stack up. He's referring to lost/destroyed coins. That's dwarfed by created coins at this rate. Right, but he quantified his approximation of how many have been lost and used that to adjust the market cap figures... He made no claim that it is overall deflationary if that's what you're arguing against.
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cypherdoc
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August 17, 2012, 02:07:38 AM |
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there's no way we've lost 1.5 million Bitcoins.
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dree12 (OP)
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August 17, 2012, 02:09:20 AM |
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Nor does his argument make sense. Deflation of the money supply can only lower the market cap now compared to then, not increase it.
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notme
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August 17, 2012, 02:13:12 AM |
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Nor does his argument make sense. Deflation of the money supply can only lower the market cap now compared to then, not increase it.
Assuming he's thinking like me, he likely believes the majority were lost before they had significant value when people tried it out and then got bored and deleted it since at the time you couldn't do much with these fancy internet tokens. there's no way we've lost 1.5 million Bitcoins.
Maybe, maybe not. There were significant amounts lost before the economy really bootstrapped though.
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FreeMoney
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August 17, 2012, 03:01:40 AM |
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there's no way we've lost 1.5 million Bitcoins.
I don't think that many are totally lost, but it isn't impossible. It was a toy for over a year, 0 value, no market for buying or selling them whatsoever. Hell, it was over a year before someone bought 2 pizzas for 10000BTC. People downloaded, mined for a few hours or longer, had 50 or 1000 or more coins totally forgot about it, sold the computer, formatted the drive whatever.
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Play Bitcoin Poker at sealswithclubs.eu. We're active and open to everyone.
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cypherdoc
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August 17, 2012, 03:22:32 AM |
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there's no way we've lost 1.5 million Bitcoins.
I don't think that many are totally lost, but it isn't impossible. It was a toy for over a year, 0 value, no market for buying or selling them whatsoever. Hell, it was over a year before someone bought 2 pizzas for 10000BTC. People downloaded, mined for a few hours or longer, had 50 or 1000 or more coins totally forgot about it, sold the computer, formatted the drive whatever. i still doubt it. i remember SgtSpikes thread closely and even added my few lost coins to it. that thread was active during the first parabolic rise when all the early adopters were still hanging around and i would think that anyone who lost a huge chunk of coins would've revealed it there. 38000 or so is a long, long way from 1.5 M.
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RyNinDaCleM
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August 17, 2012, 04:14:26 AM |
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Maybe by the time the last coin is mined, 1.5M lost coins would be likely, but I don't see it yet.
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FreeMoney
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August 17, 2012, 04:51:20 AM |
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there's no way we've lost 1.5 million Bitcoins.
I don't think that many are totally lost, but it isn't impossible. It was a toy for over a year, 0 value, no market for buying or selling them whatsoever. Hell, it was over a year before someone bought 2 pizzas for 10000BTC. People downloaded, mined for a few hours or longer, had 50 or 1000 or more coins totally forgot about it, sold the computer, formatted the drive whatever. i still doubt it. i remember SgtSpikes thread closely and even added my few lost coins to it. that thread was active during the first parabolic rise when all the early adopters were still hanging around and i would think that anyone who lost a huge chunk of coins would've revealed it there. 38000 or so is a long, long way from 1.5 M. That's just people who remember that they lost coins and are still here and are willing to share that fact. it sucks knowing you formatted $100000 but it doesn't suck as much as your wife knowing about it. The early adopters were still here (some at least) but the early try it and forget it aren't necessarily. But really I'm not arguing for 1.5M. I don't know.
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Play Bitcoin Poker at sealswithclubs.eu. We're active and open to everyone.
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sunnankar
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August 17, 2012, 06:11:20 AM |
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i still doubt it. i remember SgtSpikes thread closely and even added my few lost coins to it. that thread was active during the first parabolic rise when all the early adopters were still hanging around and i would think that anyone who lost a huge chunk of coins would've revealed it there. 38000 or so is a long, long way from 1.5 M.
The information is all there for anyone to analyze in the blockchain. It does require some assumptions, of course, so check your premises. For over a year to plot the capital landscape I have been doing my own proprietary tracking since it is such an important metric. Seems someone else started a thread about this issue. Perhaps you should take a look at it. To be honest, I am kind of surprised it has not been discussed deeper and more often but for obvious (or not so obvious to some I suppose) reasons I am not really going to bring it up.
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sunnankar
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August 17, 2012, 06:20:37 AM |
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He's referring to lost/destroyed coins.
That's dwarfed by created coins at this rate. Language has been too confounded in regards to inflation and deflation to have an intelligible discussion. Just see Mish's Inflation What The Heck Is It. I tend to define inflation as an increase in the currency supply and deflation as a decrease in the currency supply. Bitcoin, being a little bit more complicated of a monetary instrument than gold but less complicated than FRNs, requires some additional application of monetary science. This is where a sound money background comes in handy because gold in the vault is not the same as gold in the ground ... In essence, I want to know both the nominal amount and rate of change of new bitcoins and the nominal amount and rate of change of 'lost/destroyed' bitcoins. Then I can start doing some magic statistics and calculus stuffs to better discern the capital landscape.
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