chiropteran (OP)
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June 07, 2011, 04:11:35 PM |
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Is it safe to say that when difficulty either drops or basically remains the same (as opposed to increasing by a large margin every adjustment) that the BTC value has peaked, at least for a time?
Obviously, this won't occur next adjustment, given current stats, but if say, a month from now difficulty actually drops during an adjustment, do you think it would set off a panic and people would start trying to sell?
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rezin777
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June 07, 2011, 04:12:54 PM |
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Can you show me how difficulty affects price?
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tomcollins
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June 07, 2011, 04:13:35 PM |
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Is it safe to say that when difficulty either drops or basically remains the same (as opposed to increasing by a large margin every adjustment) that the BTC value has peaked, at least for a time?
Obviously, this won't occur next adjustment, given current stats, but if say, a month from now difficulty actually drops during an adjustment, do you think it would set off a panic and people would start trying to sell?
No it is not safe to say this. Please explain why you think it might be.
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chiropteran (OP)
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June 07, 2011, 04:17:28 PM |
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Can you show me how difficulty affects price?
Supply and demand. Difficulty limits supply, if it drops it actually means your supply (mining income) is going up, relative to the number of miners involved. Each miner gets more BTC, if they sell their excess it's a glut in supply. Currently, difficulty increasing each adjustment means supply is decreasing, which causes prices to rise. I realize it's a lot more complex than I have made it out to be, but independent of other variables it seems that a difficulty decrease would just be the first warning sign that value may be dropping.
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rezin777
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June 07, 2011, 04:18:36 PM |
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Can you show me how difficulty affects price?
Difficulty limits supply False. Edit: (This can be true to some extent, but only as a result of lag. The difficulty will adjust every 2016 blocks to try to allow 6 blocks found per hour. The network can outpace it.)
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TraderTimm
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June 07, 2011, 04:20:35 PM |
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Difficulty simply regulates the rate of supply. The hardcoded limit is static and will not change.
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fortitudinem multis - catenum regit omnia
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chiropteran (OP)
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June 07, 2011, 04:20:42 PM |
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Difficulty limits supply
False. I understand what you are saying. The overall supply is the same. But supply of 50 bitcoins going to 10 miners is very different from 50 bitcoins going to 1000 miners. If difficulty goes down it means there are fewer miners, as such supply of bitcoins going to each miner goes up. The supply per miner is directly affected by difficulty, and it's really more important than global supply in this case.
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tomcollins
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June 07, 2011, 04:21:41 PM |
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I understand what you are saying. The overall supply is the same. But supply of 50 bitcoins going to 10 miners is very different from 50 bitcoins going to 1000 miners. If difficulty goes down it means there are fewer miners, as such supply of bitcoins going to each miner goes up. The supply per miner is directly affected by difficulty, and it's really more important than global supply in this case. [/quote] Why does it matter if it goes to 10 miners or 1000 miners? Why is that more important?
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MoonShadow
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June 07, 2011, 04:23:28 PM |
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Difficulty limits supply
False. I understand what you are saying. The overall supply is the same. But supply of 50 bitcoins going to 10 miners is very different from 50 bitcoins going to 1000 miners. If difficulty goes down it means there are fewer miners, as such supply of bitcoins going to each miner goes up. The supply per miner is directly affected by difficulty, and it's really more important than global supply in this case. If difficulty drops, more miners jump back into the game. Difficulty goes back up, marginal miners drop back out. It's a s self balancing market.
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"The powers of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent meetings and conferences. The apex of the systems was to be the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the world's central banks which were themselves private corporations. Each central bank...sought to dominate its government by its ability to control Treasury loans, to manipulate foreign exchanges, to influence the level of economic activity in the country, and to influence cooperative politicians by subsequent economic rewards in the business world."
- Carroll Quigley, CFR member, mentor to Bill Clinton, from 'Tragedy And Hope'
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TraderTimm
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June 07, 2011, 04:24:17 PM |
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The overall dispersion of bitcoins doesn't matter unless you are positing that localized concentrations mean immediate trading pressures. For some of these bitcoins, they will be spent, saved, etc.. Doesn't guarantee they will be put into the market and traded.
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fortitudinem multis - catenum regit omnia
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rezin777
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June 07, 2011, 04:24:50 PM |
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Difficulty limits supply
False. I understand what you are saying. The overall supply is the same. But supply of 50 bitcoins going to 10 miners is very different from 50 bitcoins going to 1000 miners. If difficulty goes down it means there are fewer miners, as such supply of bitcoins going to each miner goes up. The supply per miner is directly affected by difficulty, and it's really more important than global supply in this case. Are you saying the new miners won't sell their Bitcoins but the old miners did?
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chiropteran (OP)
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June 07, 2011, 04:27:44 PM |
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Why does it matter if it goes to 10 miners or 1000 miners? Why is that more important?
Could go either way, I'll admit. But part of me thinks that miners make up a certain percentage of the bitcoin community. If say, 25% of the miners quit, resulting in a difficulty drop, that could be an indicator that 25% of the bitcoin community as a whole lost interest, which also means fewer buyrs and speculators. The other aspect is personal needs, expectations, and diminishing returns. If you are mining 10 BTC a week and making a profit, and suddenly difficulty drops such that you are now mining 20 BTC a week, you have a few possibilities. You can try to keep selling at the same value and make double your profit, but you know all you competitors (other miners) also have a sudden doubling of bitcoin income, so you might want to reduce your price a bit, since if you made a profit before you could now sell for half the price and make that same profit. Where you might not be willing to sell so cheap in the previous week.
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tomcollins
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June 07, 2011, 04:34:18 PM |
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Why does it matter if it goes to 10 miners or 1000 miners? Why is that more important?
Could go either way, I'll admit. But part of me thinks that miners make up a certain percentage of the bitcoin community. If say, 25% of the miners quit, resulting in a difficulty drop, that could be an indicator that 25% of the bitcoin community as a whole lost interest, which also means fewer buyrs and speculators. The other aspect is personal needs, expectations, and diminishing returns. If you are mining 10 BTC a week and making a profit, and suddenly difficulty drops such that you are now mining 20 BTC a week, you have a few possibilities. You can try to keep selling at the same value and make double your profit, but you know all you competitors (other miners) also have a sudden doubling of bitcoin income, so you might want to reduce your price a bit, since if you made a profit before you could now sell for half the price and make that same profit. Where you might not be willing to sell so cheap in the previous week. Ok, now we are getting somewhere. If people lose interest, that's a bad thing. However, a miner losing interest is not really *that* important, since a lot are just mining for easy money. It wouldn't concern me much. If I double how many BTC I get, my competitors may get 2x as much too, but it also means I have half as many competitors. Why do you think sellers get to decide prices, but not buyers? A seller can only sell for what people are willing to pay for them. Sellers cannot just demand whatever price they want.
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Dude65535
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June 07, 2011, 04:36:21 PM |
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Part of the problem with difficulty growth at the moment is a lack of availability on the top end AMD GPUs. I'm not sure if miners bought the majority of those high end cards or if they were just the straw that broke the camels back. Either way the lack of any for purchase is slowing network power growth.
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1DCj8ZwGZXQqQhgv6eUEnWgsxo8BTMj3mT
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chiropteran (OP)
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June 07, 2011, 04:47:59 PM |
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If I double how many BTC I get, my competitors may get 2x as much too, but it also means I have half as many competitors.
Why do you think sellers get to decide prices, but not buyers? A seller can only sell for what people are willing to pay for them. Sellers cannot just demand whatever price they want.
I can't really come up with a good argument against that. It makes sense to me that if the same number of buyers want to buy the same amount of BTC it wouldn't change the market much. However, I think there are some miners who are "holding out" some BTC as a future investment. You mine 10, sell 8, keep 2 just in case BTC reaches crazy levels at some point. Suddenly you are mining twice as much for the exact same investment, your potential profit is DOUBLE, now you might want to just sell all your BTC each week, since you don't know how long you will be able to get double the profit- since difficulty might go back up. I guess what I am saying is that if the profit was doubled for a time, some miners who were just mining to collect bitcoins might be encourage to start selling, and the number of BTC for sale would go up.
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Steve
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June 07, 2011, 04:51:40 PM |
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Part of the problem with difficulty growth at the moment is a lack of availability on the top end AMD GPUs. I'm not sure if miners bought the majority of those high end cards or if they were just the straw that broke the camels back. Either way the lack of any for purchase is slowing network power growth.
Oh no! Don't tell me people are hoarding graphics cards now...that'll send the graphics card economy into a deflationary death spiral straight to hell.
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Cusipzzz
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June 07, 2011, 04:59:18 PM |
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Part of the problem with difficulty growth at the moment is a lack of availability on the top end AMD GPUs. I'm not sure if miners bought the majority of those high end cards or if they were just the straw that broke the camels back. Either way the lack of any for purchase is slowing network power growth.
Oh no! Don't tell me people are hoarding graphics cards now...that'll send the graphics card economy into a deflationary death spiral straight to hell. Hahaha, well played sir.
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Steve
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June 07, 2011, 05:02:33 PM |
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I think difficulty is at least somewhat of an indicator of demand for bitcoins (because miners do not sell everything they mine). However, there are plenty of other factors affecting difficulty (ie. graphics card supply as mentioned) that would confound such a simple analysis as "difficulty going down is an indication of demand for bitcoin is going down." I would also suspect that infrastructure available to people for mining could also be constraining growth (I live on the hairy edge of tripped circuit breakers myself). It's summer on the northern hemisphere (where most miners are located), so cooling becomes a bigger problem. And, it's entirely possible that people could conclude that they are better off investing in bitcoins directly or that investing in bitcoin related business is more profitable than mining, but their interest in bitcoin is unaffected.
All of this means that while I think difficulty partially reflects bitcoin demand, making predictions about the future value of bitcoins based on mining difficulty is problematic. It's more likely that the temporary leveling off in price at around $8-$9 caused a slight moderation in difficulty growth with a bit of time lag...I wouldn't be surprised if this recent run up to $18 triggers another wave of difficulty growth (assuming people can obtain graphics cards).
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Freakin
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June 07, 2011, 05:13:53 PM |
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Can you show me how difficulty affects price?
Here is the correlation between difficulty and price. They have been VERY closely correlated historically. People who say they are not related are misinformed
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tomcollins
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June 07, 2011, 05:15:03 PM |
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If I double how many BTC I get, my competitors may get 2x as much too, but it also means I have half as many competitors.
Why do you think sellers get to decide prices, but not buyers? A seller can only sell for what people are willing to pay for them. Sellers cannot just demand whatever price they want.
I can't really come up with a good argument against that. It makes sense to me that if the same number of buyers want to buy the same amount of BTC it wouldn't change the market much. However, I think there are some miners who are "holding out" some BTC as a future investment. You mine 10, sell 8, keep 2 just in case BTC reaches crazy levels at some point. Suddenly you are mining twice as much for the exact same investment, your potential profit is DOUBLE, now you might want to just sell all your BTC each week, since you don't know how long you will be able to get double the profit- since difficulty might go back up. I guess what I am saying is that if the profit was doubled for a time, some miners who were just mining to collect bitcoins might be encourage to start selling, and the number of BTC for sale would go up. Why would they decide to sell them all? Why not just keep the extra ones? If you need to sell 2 to recover costs, and can save the rests, having fewer miners would have *fewer* on the general market since now instead of 80% being held, 90% are.
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