dreamspark
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July 22, 2015, 07:38:58 PM |
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Hence why the argument of it already being priced in somewhat certainly holds water.
It isn't priced in because it is over a year away. There are people arguing for a rally, a fizzle or no effect. It is undeniably a huge event on the bitcoin calendar because it marks the last time that bitcoin coin inflation can ever be blamed for supply exceeding demand and pushing the price down. 5% inflation is pretty good. But any price shenanigans that go on around that time will be driven by the same heavy speculators driving the price up and down. In the longer run if demand picks up then the reduced mining supply could lead to price rises. Which would be nice. Disagree. Any event that you know of is a part of the consideration when buying/selling that stock/currency/commodity etc etc. I'm not saying its completely priced in I said hence why that argument holds water. You can't seriously suggest that it's not already part of the market psychology when people are already talking about it and anticipating a price rise due to it. All speculators big and small are holding hoping for it to cause a price rise. It certainly doesn't mark the last time that btc inflation can be blamed for supply exceeding demand. How can you possibly say that. If the price rallies up to $10000 on a spike (remember on long term charts $1000+ was just a monthly spike) Then supply in $ terms could still easily outstrip demand. Don't forget not all mined coins are instantly sold, and all mined coins are part of inflation. My point being you can't possibly state what you're saying as fact. Saying it is priced in is meaningless in my humble opinion. It is just something people say. If the market simply knowing an event in advance means it is priced in then the 2020 halving is priced in too, right? You are right of course that if the price rallies up hugely then even 5% inflation could exert an effect. But the price is set by supply and demand and going forward the mining supply is going to become largely an irrelevence in comparison with the actual proportion of coins already in existence being used to set the price. I will just say that it is an exciting time to be in bitcoin. Well yeah the 2020 halving is also 'priced in'. Everyone knows the economy behind Bitcoin production and inflation. Knowing from the start when halvings in production are taking place and having a cap on the total money supply is why many people are here and why many speculators forsee an increase in price over time as long as new money >= coins wishing to be sold. As far as I'm concerned your biggest problem is with thinking that the only supply comes from mining. There are millions of coins out there that can be added to the supply side of the equation. There are single holders than can wipe the entire bid side from all exchanges if they so wished. Just considering mining supply is far too simplistic, and I'm certain if prices rise to ATH's and above there will be a lot of coins coming out of the woodwork. Don't take this as a bearish opinion overall just that blindly thinking halving = price rise and a continual price rise at that just doesn't seem logically sensible. On a side note I actually think price discovery in Bitcoin is really bad due to the amount of coins being held compared to the amount being traded but thats another matter all together.
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hdbuck
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July 22, 2015, 07:58:39 PM |
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On a side note I actually think price discovery in Bitcoin is really bad due to the amount of coins being held compared to the amount being traded but thats another matter all together.
aye, all exchanges together dont even reach 3 million btc volume-wise (30d) http://bitcoincharts.com/markets/where the 10 other millions??? talking about "price discovery" eh..
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ChartBuddy
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July 22, 2015, 08:01:28 PM |
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Elwar
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Viva Ut Vivas
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July 22, 2015, 08:26:46 PM |
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Well yeah the 2020 halving is also 'priced in'. Everyone knows the economy behind Bitcoin production and inflation. Knowing from the start when halvings in production are taking place and having a cap on the total money supply is why many people are here and why many speculators forsee an increase in price over time as long as new money >= coins wishing to be sold.
Yes, nothing happened after the first halving when the price was $9 because it was priced in. Nothing happened soon after that. Can't fight science.
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gentlemand
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Welt Am Draht
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July 22, 2015, 08:28:34 PM |
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Give it twenty years and all those dickheads with their shiny new iBrains will suddenly start writing wills to hackers and topping themselves before we know what's hit us.
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Fatman3001
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Make Bitcoin glow with ENIAC
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July 22, 2015, 08:37:41 PM |
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Things don't look good.
I'll try, but I don't know if it will help.
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ChartBuddy
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July 22, 2015, 09:01:24 PM |
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Morecoin Freeman
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July 22, 2015, 09:02:58 PM |
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Things don't look good.
In my opinion things look very good for the bulls. Support at ~275 is holding strong. I'm slowly accumulating more coins as we speak.
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Erdogan
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July 22, 2015, 09:10:13 PM |
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Is this right ? Porn were first real mass adopters of VHS, DVD and Internet technology And postcards. In the beginning of the VCR, a friend of mine bought one, and the reaction from his mother in law was: Do you really want that filth in your house?
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Erdogan
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July 22, 2015, 09:15:13 PM |
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Hence why the argument of it already being priced in somewhat certainly holds water.
It isn't priced in because it is over a year away. There are people arguing for a rally, a fizzle or no effect. It is undeniably a huge event on the bitcoin calendar because it marks the last time that bitcoin coin inflation can ever be blamed for supply exceeding demand and pushing the price down. 5% inflation is pretty good. But any price shenanigans that go on around that time will be driven by the same heavy speculators driving the price up and down. In the longer run if demand picks up then the reduced mining supply could lead to price rises. Which would be nice. Disagree. Any event that you know of is a part of the consideration when buying/selling that stock/currency/commodity etc etc. I'm not saying its completely priced in I said hence why that argument holds water. You can't seriously suggest that it's not already part of the market psychology when people are already talking about it and anticipating a price rise due to it. All speculators big and small are holding hoping for it to cause a price rise. It certainly doesn't mark the last time that btc inflation can be blamed for supply exceeding demand. How can you possibly say that. If the price rallies up to $10000 on a spike (remember on long term charts $1000+ was just a monthly spike) Then supply in $ terms could still easily outstrip demand. Don't forget not all mined coins are instantly sold, and all mined coins are part of inflation. My point being you can't possibly state what you're saying as fact. Saying it is priced in is meaningless in my humble opinion. It is just something people say. If the market simply knowing an event in advance means it is priced in then the 2020 halving is priced in too, right? You are right of course that if the price rallies up hugely then even 5% inflation could exert an effect. But the price is set by supply and demand and going forward the mining supply is going to become largely an irrelevence in comparison with the actual proportion of coins already in existence being used to set the price. I will just say that it is an exciting time to be in bitcoin. The supply is the coins on offer from people who want to hold less.
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prodigy8
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July 22, 2015, 09:21:34 PM |
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What do you suggest now? Buy or sell ? I would suggest staying there where you are not selling and not buying, not a good time.
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Torque
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July 22, 2015, 09:34:00 PM |
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What do you suggest now? Buy or sell ? I would suggest staying there where you are not selling and not buying, not a good time. Right, because consumer adoption always increases when no one buys.
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ChartBuddy
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July 22, 2015, 10:03:11 PM |
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BrewCrewFan
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July 22, 2015, 10:58:34 PM |
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Well yeah the 2020 halving is also 'priced in'. Everyone knows the economy behind Bitcoin production and inflation. Knowing from the start when halvings in production are taking place and having a cap on the total money supply is why many people are here and why many speculators forsee an increase in price over time as long as new money >= coins wishing to be sold.
Yes, nothing happened after the first halving when the price was $9 because it was priced in. Nothing happened soon after that. Can't fight science. I dont know if that was sarcasm or not but I will side with not. very few people gave a shit about BTC when it was 9 bucks bud. When you could mine tons with just a cpu... yeah.
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dreamspark
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July 22, 2015, 10:58:36 PM |
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Well yeah the 2020 halving is also 'priced in'. Everyone knows the economy behind Bitcoin production and inflation. Knowing from the start when halvings in production are taking place and having a cap on the total money supply is why many people are here and why many speculators forsee an increase in price over time as long as new money >= coins wishing to be sold.
Yes, nothing happened after the first halving when the price was $9 because it was priced in. Nothing happened soon after that. Can't fight science. Explainable by demand (new money >= coins wishing to be sold), not necessarily a direct result of the halving. The point being you still need new money coming in to be greater than the value of the coins wishing to be sold regardless of mining amount. Saying supply halving MUST mean price increase is not true.
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BrewCrewFan
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July 22, 2015, 10:59:41 PM |
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Well yeah the 2020 halving is also 'priced in'. Everyone knows the economy behind Bitcoin production and inflation. Knowing from the start when halvings in production are taking place and having a cap on the total money supply is why many people are here and why many speculators forsee an increase in price over time as long as new money >= coins wishing to be sold.
Yes, nothing happened after the first halving when the price was $9 because it was priced in. Nothing happened soon after that. Can't fight science. Explainable by demand (new money >= coins wishing to be sold), not necessarily a direct result of the halving. The point being you still need new money coming in to be greater than the value of the coins wishing to be sold regardless of mining amount. Saying supply halving MUST mean price increase is not true. If we did not have new money coming in then the price would be zero. IMO, if it even sniffed 100 bucks I would take a chance a buy a good amount of coin myself.
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ChartBuddy
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July 22, 2015, 11:02:14 PM |
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findftp
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Delusional crypto obsessionist
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July 22, 2015, 11:14:49 PM |
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Trending up again?
Yes, it just went up 3 cents...
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