Cassius
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March 14, 2017, 02:45:26 PM |
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Best guess is that the rise is just continuation of trend, no fundamental change in overall bullish sentiment despite the COIN decision, and lower fresh supply from mining hitting the market. I suppose there may be other traders who believe SolidX stands a chance.
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kurious
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March 14, 2017, 02:46:03 PM |
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Normally, raising interest rates makes a currency stronger.
Yes, hence pulling money out of other asset classes like stocks and arguably bitcoin, all things being equal. I doubt there's much of an effect for bitcoin, if any, but if there was it would be in that direction. If people's savings can keep pace with inflation (which is also usually held back by high rates) by normal deposit account savings, then why risk it in shares? Stocks are more popular when money is cheap, but saving doesn't pay much as investors are desperate to get returns that low bank rates will not supply. Low rates encourage higher risk savings to look more appealing, so higher rates (ordinarily) should discourage riskier investments - such as (arguably) Bitcoin. This is of course classical economic theory - and often money markets, savers, investors and borrowers don't know enough about the theory to do what it says they should 
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Cassius
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March 14, 2017, 02:50:13 PM |
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Normally, raising interest rates makes a currency stronger.
Yes, hence pulling money out of other asset classes like stocks and arguably bitcoin, all things being equal. I doubt there's much of an effect for bitcoin, if any, but if there was it would be in that direction. If people's savings can keep pace with inflation (which is also usually held back by high rates) by normal deposit account savings, then why risk it in shares? Stocks are more popular when money is cheap, but saving doesn't pay much as investors are desperate to get returns that low bank rates will not supply. Low rates encourage higher risk savings to look more appealing, so higher rates (ordinarily) should discourage riskier investments - such as (arguably) Bitcoin. This is of course classical economic theory - and often money markets, savers, investors and borrowers don't know enough about the theory to do what it says they should  I thought this was exactly my point! Falling stock prices would generally correlate with a fall in bitcoin, under this theory. In practice I doubt bitcoin traders are a large enough and homogenous enough group for that to hold true.
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blockcha1n
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March 14, 2017, 03:05:00 PM |
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What's going to happen when $1242 is past? A Mt. gox is finally dead announcement and everybody and everything is at peace in the world?  The price hasn't changed from the beginning of the month until the middle of the month. Not by very much. Wasn't the Chinese exchanges going to give their verdict on what's going to happen next yesterday March the 13th?
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Holliday
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March 14, 2017, 03:07:44 PM |
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It has been a lot time that i not monitor this thing. we don't have a voting process on that? who makes the final decision ? hard fork could f@ck bitcoin price and trust of course...
No. There is no "voting process" in a decentralized cryptocurrency. The whole ecosystem either comes to a decision by consensus or not. You technically give your "vote" by running or adopting a specific soft fork, hard fork, or implementation. I'd say the only vote that matters, in Bitcoin or anywhere really, is the voting that you do with your wallet.
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Ted E. Bare
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March 14, 2017, 03:27:16 PM |
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Alt coins coming back down and bitcoin price increasing, what a surprise.
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kurious
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March 14, 2017, 03:38:32 PM |
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Normally, raising interest rates makes a currency stronger.
Yes, hence pulling money out of other asset classes like stocks and arguably bitcoin, all things being equal. I doubt there's much of an effect for bitcoin, if any, but if there was it would be in that direction. If people's savings can keep pace with inflation (which is also usually held back by high rates) by normal deposit account savings, then why risk it in shares? Stocks are more popular when money is cheap, but saving doesn't pay much as investors are desperate to get returns that low bank rates will not supply. Low rates encourage higher risk savings to look more appealing, so higher rates (ordinarily) should discourage riskier investments - such as (arguably) Bitcoin. This is of course classical economic theory - and often money markets, savers, investors and borrowers don't know enough about the theory to do what it says they should  I thought this was exactly my point! Falling stock prices would generally correlate with a fall in bitcoin, under this theory. In practice I doubt bitcoin traders are a large enough and homogenous enough group for that to hold true. I wasn't really disagreeing with you, just saying what interest rate rises would normally be expected to do to economic activity in different asset classes. I was 'elaborating' as Lauda asked.. To be honest Honey Badger has been looking such a good buy of late - stock market falls may bring more money into BTC - I mean, we just went over 1250 - so economic theory ain't much help. Let's face it, we cannot recall too many economists predicting the banking crash, can we - on the other hand Satoshi's white paper was timed just right for it. Bitcoin is perhaps more likely to behave as a commodity, more like gold. Gold (in theory) should go down as federal bonds etc pay more - so there is an opportunity cost to holding an asset that pays no interest. However the last four recorded Fed interest rate hikes have seen gold go up, not down. So theories are meaningless!
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Sundark
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March 14, 2017, 03:45:35 PM |
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test - I think that Bitcointalk's database is having problems currently, as some of my previous posting attempts were unregistered and generated error. Alt coins coming back down and bitcoin price increasing, what a surprise.
isn't this always the case? People are usually sell altcoins to gather money for purchasing bitcoin. It is standard cue whenever we may expect another bull run.
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kurious
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March 14, 2017, 03:45:49 PM |
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Alt coins coming back down and bitcoin price increasing, what a surprise.
More like the other way around - BTC went up over 1250 first and the ones I was watching moved inversely. But you're right - all Alts are BTC dependent in some respect. Most are priced (effectively) in BTC. Whether BTC will go up further from here on in is what I am waiting to see. I really didn't expect to be over 1250 just two working days after the ETF rejection. BTC never ceases to surprise me.
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soullyG
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March 14, 2017, 03:47:47 PM |
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jbreher
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lose: unfind ... loose: untight
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March 14, 2017, 03:49:56 PM |
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Shouldn't miners act always in what is better for higher Bitcoin price (higher rewards for them)? Or is it that for some unexplained reason they think the price would react otherwise?
It's really quite simple. And actually quite obvious. If you lift a stupid production quota that artificially hard-caps the number of transactions Bitcoin is capable of to about a quarter-million per day, then more people can each make more transactions. This is by definition greater utility. Greater utility leads to greater value, and greater value leads to greater price. All boats are floated.
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Johnny00
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March 14, 2017, 03:59:08 PM |
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Alt coins coming back down and bitcoin price increasing, what a surprise.
More like the other way around - BTC went up over 1250 first and the ones I was watching moved inversely. But you're right - all Alts are BTC dependent in some respect. Most are priced (effectively) in BTC. Whether BTC will go up further from here on in is what I am waiting to see. I really didn't expect to be over 1250 just two working days after the ETF rejection. BTC never ceases to surprise me. yes just crazy, people sold hoping it crashed now they are out of luck trying to buy back in. I expect it to be stable. Just goes to show you not to day trade. Find value and buy it and hold it.
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JimboToronto
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Activity: 4424
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You're never too old to think young.
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March 14, 2017, 05:24:29 PM |
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A slightly late good morning Bitcoinland.
Still creeping upward I see... currently $1252USD (Bitcoinaverage).
Gotta love the slow steady growth. The last day on which we had a red candle was also a day on which we had an ATH.
Is it safe to say that 3 digits are a thing of the past, barring some unforeseen, serious calamity?
If last week's ETF rejection couldn't take it below $1000 for more than a few seconds, I don't see any minor market movements doing it.
Slow and steady, go Bitcoin go.
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bitserve
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Activity: 1960
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Self made HODLER ✓
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March 14, 2017, 05:37:15 PM |
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Shouldn't miners act always in what is better for higher Bitcoin price (higher rewards for them)? Or is it that for some unexplained reason they think the price would react otherwise?
It's really quite simple. And actually quite obvious. If you lift a stupid production quota that artificially hard-caps the number of transactions Bitcoin is capable of to about a quarter-million per day, then more people can each make more transactions. This is by definition greater utility. Greater utility leads to greater value, and greater value leads to greater price. All boats are floated. I think that everyone agrees that the transaction limit need to grow. And that, if alone, would be a good thing for the price. I really don't care if that is achieved by segwit+LN, BU or whatever... But I do care that if it is done without an almost unanimous consensus trust and confidence could be irreparably damaged, and that leads to reduced value/reduced price.
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HI-TEC99
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Activity: 2772
Merit: 2847
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March 14, 2017, 06:04:06 PM |
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Normally, raising interest rates makes a currency stronger.
Yes, hence pulling money out of other asset classes like stocks and arguably bitcoin, all things being equal. I doubt there's much of an effect for bitcoin, if any, but if there was it would be in that direction. If people's savings can keep pace with inflation (which is also usually held back by high rates) by normal deposit account savings, then why risk it in shares? Stocks are more popular when money is cheap, but saving doesn't pay much as investors are desperate to get returns that low bank rates will not supply. Low rates encourage higher risk savings to look more appealing, so higher rates (ordinarily) should discourage riskier investments - such as (arguably) Bitcoin. This is of course classical economic theory - and often money markets, savers, investors and borrowers don't know enough about the theory to do what it says they should  I thought this was exactly my point! Falling stock prices would generally correlate with a fall in bitcoin, under this theory. In practice I doubt bitcoin traders are a large enough and homogenous enough group for that to hold true. I wasn't really disagreeing with you, just saying what interest rate rises would normally be expected to do to economic activity in different asset classes. I was 'elaborating' as Lauda asked.. To be honest Honey Badger has been looking such a good buy of late - stock market falls may bring more money into BTC - I mean, we just went over 1250 - so economic theory ain't much help. Let's face it, we cannot recall too many economists predicting the banking crash, can we - on the other hand Satoshi's white paper was timed just right for it. Bitcoin is perhaps more likely to behave as a commodity, more like gold. Gold (in theory) should go down as federal bonds etc pay more - so there is an opportunity cost to holding an asset that pays no interest. However the last four recorded Fed interest rate hikes have seen gold go up, not down. So theories are meaningless! I read that the Yuan and other currencies will crash against the dollar after the FED raises the rate. Wouldn't a crashing Yuan start the Chinese buying Bitcoin again? Although their exchanges froze withdrawals they are now trading in huge quantities on localbitcoins.
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BTCtrader71
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March 14, 2017, 06:08:33 PM |
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Shouldn't miners act always in what is better for higher Bitcoin price (higher rewards for them)? Or is it that for some unexplained reason they think the price would react otherwise?
It's really quite simple. And actually quite obvious. If you lift a stupid production quota that artificially hard-caps the number of transactions Bitcoin is capable of to about a quarter-million per day, then more people can each make more transactions. This is by definition greater utility. Greater utility leads to greater value, and greater value leads to greater price. All boats are floated. I think that everyone agrees that the transaction limit need to grow. And that, if alone, would be a good thing for the price. I really don't care if that is achieved by segwit+LN, BU or whatever... But I do care that if it is done without an almost unanimous consensus trust and confidence could be irreparably damaged, and that leads to reduced value/reduced price. If lack of near unanimous consensus on a major decision is enough to kill bitcoin, then bitcoin was never a good idea to begin with. Bitcoin was designed with the assumption that there will be major decisions that must be made even in the absence of near-unanimous consensus. In a way it will be good to have a contentious hard fork so we can see if bitcoin survives. Which it will, but not everyone will believe it until they see it. So better now than later.
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GGALINff
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March 14, 2017, 06:11:07 PM |
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who knows something?
even with all the Hard Fork FUD, price creeps up
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Spaceman_Spiff
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₪``Campaign Manager´´₪
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March 14, 2017, 06:29:25 PM |
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It has been a lot time that i not monitor this thing. we don't have a voting process on that? who makes the final decision ? hard fork could f@ck bitcoin price and trust of course...
No. There is no "voting process" in a decentralized cryptocurrency. The whole ecosystem either comes to a decision by consensus or not. You technically give your "vote" by running or adopting a specific soft fork, hard fork, or implementation. I'd say the only vote that matters, in Bitcoin or anywhere really, is the voting that you do with your wallet. I think some sort of voting system based on BTC holdings is sorely needed for coordinating development. Buying and selling can only be done after a decision has been made, only brings 1d information (up or down, a little or much) and more importantly is only the net result of many different forces (macroeconomics etc.) so it will generally be hard to say the price is going up because of reason X or Y.
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Paashaas
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March 14, 2017, 06:34:20 PM |
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Buggy BU with a remote crash vunerability. Even after a year those ''skilled'' BU dev didn't noticed it, while pushing it asap
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JayJuanGee
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Self-Custody is a right. Say no to "non-custodial"
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March 14, 2017, 06:39:18 PM |
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Shouldn't miners act always in what is better for higher Bitcoin price (higher rewards for them)? Or is it that for some unexplained reason they think the price would react otherwise?
It's really quite simple. And actually quite obvious. If you lift a stupid production quota that artificially hard-caps the number of transactions Bitcoin is capable of to about a quarter-million per day, then more people can each make more transactions. This is by definition greater utility. Greater utility leads to greater value, and greater value leads to greater price. All boats are floated. More or less I agree with that perspective. However, you cannot necessarily achieve what you are suggesting without some give and take in other areas, whether that is related to possible changes in governance or security or decentralization (there may be some other trade-offs too that I am not remembering at this particular moment). So, your simple goal of attempting to achieve greater throughput sounds good in the abstract in the event it were to be able to be achieved without any sacrifices in other areas. There is a kind of total balance that should be considered beyond just looking at one aspect and considering it as if it were the exclusive goal.
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