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Author Topic: I sold everything at $158/159 this morning  (Read 20712 times)
jjtech
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December 05, 2013, 05:42:38 PM
 #381

i love how people go gravedigging when someone makes a strong stance on something that doesn't pan out. maybe that'll prevent people from trying to look like know-it-alls.
Everybody can be wrong and usually is in one way or another. The problem is when a guy comes out and plays know-it-all as you say. Calls people suckers etc. Nobody knows what will happen to btc, so what does it hut to say "I think" or "I believe that"..... There is something necro about those guys, sorry
Jochen
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December 11, 2013, 08:01:15 PM
 #382

Now this guy look back @ this and think  SadHuh
BuhTuglia
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December 11, 2013, 10:48:36 PM
 #383

Now this guy look back @ this and think  SadHuh

Hah hah, he might look back and think on it, but he probably won't come back on here and admit he was wrong... BtC is not an "Established commodity"... lots of good that 15 year experience did him... The future bitcoin millionaires did not need his "Good luck", they had something better... and it sure wasn't selling at $159.00...

Just another dust miner... Enquiring Gnomes want to Mine!
Send nothing to 16SVa2iQA6HuNPDGYShpmeEvUBRi2gW7f1
zeraTunerse
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December 11, 2013, 10:53:08 PM
 #384

Now this guy look back @ this and think  SadHuh

Hah hah, he might look back and think on it, but he probably won't come back on here and admit he was wrong... BtC is not an "Established commodity"... lots of good that 15 year experience did him... The future bitcoin millionaires did not need his "Good luck", they had something better... and it sure wasn't selling at $159.00...



Maybe OP rebought at $80, so he hoding 2x as much Bitcoins. But I doubt it and I remember the April crash, it was tough to buy at $80 right after the crash
psybits
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December 12, 2013, 07:37:32 AM
 #385

Now this guy look back @ this and think  SadHuh

Hah hah, he might look back and think on it, but he probably won't come back on here and admit he was wrong... BtC is not an "Established commodity"... lots of good that 15 year experience did him... The future bitcoin millionaires did not need his "Good luck", they had something better... and it sure wasn't selling at $159.00...



Maybe OP rebought at $80, so he hoding 2x as much Bitcoins. But I doubt it and I remember the April crash, it was tough to buy at $80 right after the crash

My guess is OP has no stake in BTC anymore.

With the recent news re Wallstreet adoption coming in the next few months things are going to get a little crazy Wink
bryant.coleman
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December 12, 2013, 08:14:53 AM
 #386

My guess is OP has no stake in BTC anymore.

OP is quite a bit active here. So there is a possibility that he had bought some coins a few months after he sold them, albeit at a higher price.
Essex343
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December 12, 2013, 08:41:57 AM
 #387

well, it did go down to 50, 55, and 65 at different times. so.... not too far off.

jmevz
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December 12, 2013, 09:03:19 AM
 #388

When's this Wall Street thing happening? Is there a post about this?

bryant.coleman
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December 12, 2013, 09:31:15 AM
 #389

well, it did go down to 50, 55, and 65 at different times. so.... not too far off.

In Mt Gox, the lowest was around 69 (after the $ 261 peak in April). Those who bought BTC then are currently sitting on top of 1,500% profit.
BitPappa
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December 12, 2013, 10:45:56 PM
 #390

Maybe OP rebought at $80, so he hoding 2x as much Bitcoins. But I doubt it and I remember the April crash, it was tough to buy at $80 right after the crash
Wasn't hard for me! But I was trying to get in as the price was skyrocketing in April (waiting for my Gox account to fund), so $80 seemed like a bargain to me. I can see those who had cost-basis of under $10 would have found it difficult to buy at $80 after the spike… Probably like $600 didn't seem like a huge bargain to me after $1200, with my average cost-basis for most of my coin being sub-$100.

In Mt Gox, the lowest was around 69 (after the $ 261 peak in April). Those who bought BTC then are currently sitting on top of 1,500% profit.
Heck, even those who purchased at that April peak price have had their investment more than quadruple (and then settle back down to a mere tripling +). I picked up a few $65-ish coins on Coinbase, I believe, at some low points in months after April.

trumbadera
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December 12, 2013, 10:51:47 PM
 #391


With the recent news re Wallstreet adoption coming in the next few months things are going to get a little crazy Wink

And I thought Bitcoin is crazy already with the price swings this year Smiley
Anyone
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December 12, 2013, 11:33:44 PM
 #392

From what I think I understand, if peeps are treating Bitcoin as a commodity (like gold etc) then they have missed the whole point of Bitcoins...

Satoshi must be so proud right now, instead of replacing money, we use Bitcoin to make more money.... Doesn't make sense. If we were actually serious about Bitcoin replacing government owned paper moneys, then Bitcoins need to be used, spent, circulated and incorporated into our daily lives, otherwise its just another software program to use to make money. No different to any other "get rich" type software - A very sad outcome for such an amazing concept.

I would be curious to find how many people on this forum are in it to make more money, supporting the centralised banking system, and how money are here to escape the bankers, hoping for something better? Can you realistically see yourself using Bitcoin for your money dealings in the future?

If this attitude becomes the most prevailing (the idea of Bitcoin as a commodity) then Bitcoin as a currency is doomed. A few fat cats and lucky geeks will make a bundle, and the vision of a decentralised currency dies as yet another good idea ruined by our own human greed.. (in my humble newbie opinion!)
hollowframe
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December 12, 2013, 11:35:03 PM
 #393

OP got back in at some point and posted in spec forum that he sold everything from like 350-445
e521
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December 12, 2013, 11:47:14 PM
 #394

From what I think I understand, if peeps are treating Bitcoin as a commodity (like gold etc) then they have missed the whole point of Bitcoins...

Satoshi must be so proud right now, instead of replacing money, we use Bitcoin to make more money.... Doesn't make sense. If we were actually serious about Bitcoin replacing government owned paper moneys, then Bitcoins need to be used, spent, circulated and incorporated into our daily lives, otherwise its just another software program to use to make money. No different to any other "get rich" type software - A very sad outcome for such an amazing concept.

I would be curious to find how many people on this forum are in it to make more money, supporting the centralised banking system, and how money are here to escape the bankers, hoping for something better? Can you realistically see yourself using Bitcoin for your money dealings in the future?

If this attitude becomes the most prevailing (the idea of Bitcoin as a commodity) then Bitcoin as a currency is doomed. A few fat cats and lucky geeks will make a bundle, and the vision of a decentralised currency dies as yet another good idea ruined by our own human greed.. (in my humble newbie opinion!)

That's not entirely true, bitcoin the currency can be used side by side with FIAT for example to fight iper inflation.
At the moment is very difficult to buy cryptos and only a fool would spend mined coins seeing the long term trend.
And how would you deal with irreversibility with internet transactions?

Jochen
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December 12, 2013, 11:49:48 PM
 #395

When's this Wall Street thing happening? Is there a post about this?

So says Barry Silbert, founder and chief executive of SecondMarket, the online platform that allows its users to trade private company stocks. "We're three to six months away from Wall Street dollars moving into Bitcoin in a big way," he says.

Read more: http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/230346#ixzz2nJ8SJj6b
Ardenyham
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December 12, 2013, 11:50:50 PM
 #396

OP got back in at some point and posted in spec forum that he sold everything from like 350-445

OP has conservative trading strategy, and it works, but just holding is much better I believe
tinus42
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December 12, 2013, 11:52:11 PM
 #397

Now this guy look back @ this and think  SadHuh

Hah hah, he might look back and think on it, but he probably won't come back on here and admit he was wrong... BtC is not an "Established commodity"... lots of good that 15 year experience did him... The future bitcoin millionaires did not need his "Good luck", they had something better... and it sure wasn't selling at $159.00...



Maybe OP rebought at $80, so he hoding 2x as much Bitcoins. But I doubt it and I remember the April crash, it was tough to buy at $80 right after the crash

Even in last July one could have bought at below $70.
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December 13, 2013, 12:01:26 AM
 #398

[quote/]That's not entirely true, bitcoin the currency can be used side by side with FIAT for example to fight iper inflation.
At the moment is very difficult to buy cryptos and only a fool would spend mined coins seeing the long term trend.
And how would you deal with irreversibility with internet transactions?
[/quote]

Only a fool... so you dont agree that the use and circulation of Bitcoins has anything to do with its rise/fall in value? I know it does with paper moneys, why are Bitcoins different?

Irreversibility is simply a matter of regulation and choice. At some point, those seeking more secure comerce methods will develop methods to send and receive, and receipting systems, and identification systems (Coinbase already uses bank account connections, probably others do too) Those seeking less regulation "cash economy" would simply not use regulated systems. Why is that complex?

monbux
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December 13, 2013, 12:07:28 AM
 #399

So, just popping in on the thread to laugh at the OP's fortune telling skills.  Grin
IMHO bitcoin is pretty mysterious, you really can't tell where it'll go next.
e521
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December 13, 2013, 12:36:57 AM
 #400

[quote/]That's not entirely true, bitcoin the currency can be used side by side with FIAT for example to fight iper inflation.
At the moment is very difficult to buy cryptos and only a fool would spend mined coins seeing the long term trend.
And how would you deal with irreversibility with internet transactions?

Only a fool... so you dont agree that the use and circulation of Bitcoins has anything to do with its rise/fall in value? I know it does with paper moneys, why are Bitcoins different?

Irreversibility is simply a matter of regulation and choice. At some point, those seeking more secure comerce methods will develop methods to send and receive, and receipting systems, and identification systems (Coinbase already uses bank account connections, probably others do too) Those seeking less regulation "cash economy" would simply not use regulated systems. Why is that complex?


[/quote]

Yes I don't agree with the simple fact that BTC is not backed by anybody, it's a speculative "commodity".
And yes, it is complex as I need to trust an unknown 3rd party. It's not like using a Visa, Paypal or Mastercard

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