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Question: When will BTC get back above $70K:
7/14 - 0 (0%)
7/21 - 1 (0.8%)
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8/4 - 16 (13.2%)
8/11 - 7 (5.8%)
8/18 - 6 (5%)
8/25 - 8 (6.6%)
After August - 72 (59.5%)
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Author Topic: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion  (Read 26484322 times)
This is a self-moderated topic. If you do not want to be moderated by the person who started this topic, create a new topic. (174 posts by 3 users with 9 merit deleted.)
afbitcoins
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June 25, 2013, 10:29:46 AM
 #18741

Fucking banks. My cards have been blocked because of suspected fraud after legitimately purchasing train tickets (which for some reason the bank have decided look suspicious). This is not to mention many times I've had online transactions held until I phone and confirm I intended it. Is this to protect us or to in fact monitor and police all our transactions. Sooner the world moves to decentralised money the better.
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June 25, 2013, 10:53:35 AM
 #18742

Those are delusional libertarians who believe in the mantra: they laugh at you, they fight you ,then you win.
Yes Bitcoin network would still exist and mined but valued in the single digits.What a win it would be!


Oh Rampion would cry from happiness if that would happen. 1000's of Bitcoins worth 5 cents each and not a person in the world who would want to touch them anymore. He would call that the war has been won.

I believe "not a person in the world who would want to touch them" is very inaccurate. There are lots of people who don't believe the "legitimacy" delusion, people who is not swallowing the BS they are fed with. People who appreciate the ability to do whatever they want with their money, regardless of what some regulators/policemen/government thugs say.

Are you worried by Bitcoin going to single digits, even sub dollar? I explained many times, with figures, why I believe in the long term Bitcoin will be more expensive than now, even in a global ban scenario. Black market economy is huge, so if your only worry is the exchange rate, I won't worry so much. Of course you will have to learn how to trade it outside the traditional channels in that scenario.

Then, I will say something that may be very impopular in the speculation sub forum: if Bitcoin goes to single digits but it survives, serving as a tool for those that cannot move their money freely in order to bypass unfair regulations, I will be happy. Sure, I would have lost a lot of the value I threw at Bitcoin, which is not negligible - I can tell you I could leave very good during two years with the amount of fiat I invested in BTC. Still, if I'd lose it I wouldn't be starving, and I'm very conscious from the very first moment that this is a super high risk investment. Fiat denominated profit is a nice bonus, but it was never my goal when I decided to participate in this experiment. I very much prefer being free than being rich. For me Bitcoin is a matter of freedom and principles, this is about challenging the rotten financial system, not about getting rich quick. And still, as I said earlier, in the long run I don't see BTC going to sub-dollar unless a) a superior crypto with the same characteristics (trust-free, decentralized) takes over, or b) a fatal flaw in the protocol is discovered.

Let the party begin, I hope you were never so foolish to believe that the people pulling the strings in the financial world would leave something that truly endangers their position alone.
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June 25, 2013, 11:00:11 AM
 #18743

afbitcoins
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June 25, 2013, 11:08:16 AM
 #18744

Those are delusional libertarians who believe in the mantra: they laugh at you, they fight you ,then you win.
Yes Bitcoin network would still exist and mined but valued in the single digits.What a win it would be!


Oh Rampion would cry from happiness if that would happen. 1000's of Bitcoins worth 5 cents each and not a person in the world who would want to touch them anymore. He would call that the war has been won.

I believe "not a person in the world who would want to touch them" is very inaccurate. There are lots of people who don't believe the "legitimacy" delusion, people who is not swallowing the BS they are fed with. People who appreciate the ability to do whatever they want with their money, regardless of what some regulators/policemen/government thugs say.

Are you worried by Bitcoin going to single digits, even sub dollar? I explained many times, with figures, why I believe in the long term Bitcoin will be more expensive than now, even in a global ban scenario. Black market economy is huge, so if your only worry is the exchange rate, I won't worry so much. Of course you will have to learn how to trade it outside the traditional channels in that scenario.

Then, I will say something that may be very impopular in the speculation sub forum: if Bitcoin goes to single digits but it survives, serving as a tool for those that cannot move their money freely in order to bypass unfair regulations, I will be happy. Sure, I would have lost a lot of the value I threw at Bitcoin, which is not negligible - I can tell you I could leave very good during two years with the amount of fiat I invested in BTC. Still, if I'd lose it I wouldn't be starving, and I'm very conscious from the very first moment that this is a super high risk investment. Fiat denominated profit is a nice bonus, but it was never my goal when I decided to participate in this experiment. I very much prefer being free than being rich. For me Bitcoin is a matter of freedom and principles, this is about challenging the rotten financial system, not about getting rich quick. And still, as I said earlier, in the long run I don't see BTC going to sub-dollar unless a) a superior crypto with the same characteristics (trust-free, decentralized) takes over, or b) a fatal flaw in the protocol is discovered.

Let the party begin, I hope you were never so foolish to believe that the people pulling the strings in the financial world would leave something that truly endangers their position alone.


Great post Rampion, I'm with you I'd happily continue using bitcoins if they were priced in single digits. The way the economy is looking I'd say its much more likely that fiat currency will be the one losing all its value.

Interesting fact, the Federal Reserve has caused the US$ to devalue by 98% since it was created 100 years ago. Inflation is how to rob the masses without them realising.
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June 25, 2013, 11:09:23 AM
 #18745

I'd hardly call Inflation robbing the masses, but QE meanwhile is robbing the masses.

The price seems stuck, that gulf between 106 and 104 is just  Shocked
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June 25, 2013, 11:24:40 AM
 #18746

The spike at mtgox is really artificial as people flee this exchange with their bitcoins stuffed into their wallets...
Just look at the bitstamp order book where you see the opposite ...
Everyone is trying to sell
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June 25, 2013, 11:36:55 AM
 #18747

The spike at mtgox is really artificial as people flee this exchange with their bitcoins stuffed into their wallets...
Just look at the bitstamp order book where you see the opposite ...
Everyone is trying to sell

Yes, the Bitstamp order book is a "failsafe" of sort regarding the current state of BTC.
Most of us here are bullish on BTC, just not short to mid term.

I don't understand, are you talking about the early morning spike? I can see that some sold their coins, but what about the huge buy that cause the price spike and slippage this morning?
This happened a week or two ago when the price dropped below 100 as well. Same thing, bad business decision regarding the slippage (and the hour was odd, China?). I really wonder if someone is
desperate to keep the price above 100, as once it spends time below that, a new psychology develops (if you know what I mean)...

Not a picture of health from the 2nd largest exchange...

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June 25, 2013, 11:53:45 AM
 #18748

Yes, it is possible that we will see again coins for 95-98 on Bitstamp and BTC-e and we do not know how long the wall at $ 104 will be on Mtx ...
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June 25, 2013, 12:00:18 PM
 #18749

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June 25, 2013, 12:27:32 PM
 #18750

I'd hardly call Inflation robbing the masses, but QE meanwhile is robbing the masses.

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June 25, 2013, 12:51:10 PM
 #18751

I'd hardly call Inflation robbing the masses, but QE meanwhile is robbing the masses.



Well, first let me say both are robbing the masses.
But, QE is not inflation at the same level of typical inflation, as the money is mostly just seeing the upper reaches of society. (e.g - Via QE, the banks are investing in bonds, the stock market, etc and most of society is not seeing that money.) I believe this can be verified with the velocity of money.
I still think QE causes some inflation, but not as much as I once thought (after reading about it).

Anyone jump in here as I'm going by what I've heard recently. And it's still a recipe for disaster.
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June 25, 2013, 12:51:26 PM
 #18752

I'd hardly call Inflation robbing the masses, but QE meanwhile is robbing the masses.



Cute Pic.

Quantitive Easing is deployed with a goal of increasing inflation sure, but do you disagree inflation is pretty much inherent in any monetary system since the concept of money was deployed? I'm only questioning why anyone would be surprised that over 100 years 1$ buys far less?

Edit: the guy int he post before me is correct. QE was deployed with the goal of increasing liquidity for banks on the dime of the taxpayer which yes i agree has basically amounted to highway robbery and complete subsidy of greedy banking's downside
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June 25, 2013, 01:00:19 PM
 #18753

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June 25, 2013, 01:06:48 PM
 #18754

Quantitive Easing is deployed with a goal of increasing inflation sure, but do you disagree inflation is pretty much inherent in any monetary system since the concept of money was deployed? I'm only questioning why anyone would be surprised that over 100 years 1$ buys far less?

I don't get why inflation should be inherent to the monetary system as you say. I don't get why a dollar's purchasing power should decrease over time.
Suppose there was a finite and constant amount of $ (yeah right)
Suppose the population is increasing so the number of economical subjects is increasing.
Suppose the amount of food they need is also increasing.

The amount of $ is finite and constant, but there are more bananas being produced over time. The bananas are still priced in dollars. My logic says that an increasing quantity of bananas will be worth less dollars per banana.

I understand that the argument against deflationary currencies can be summarized like that:
The increasing purchasing power of the dollar would bring people to hoarding dollars instead of cultivating bananas.
This in turn would make the population starve.

Then I say: This in turn would cause bananas to become more valuable, hence their price in dollars would go up again. It seems pretty self regulating to me. With the added bonus that we'd stop producing more bananas than we really need.

s/dollar/bitcoin I think this is what we are trying to do.

Where did I get it wrong?
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June 25, 2013, 01:16:13 PM
 #18755

I'm not sure what we are debating however I think you can direct most of your anger towards nixon doing away with the gold standard (fiat money) and Milton What's his face :-)

Back to bitcoins and wall tracking ?
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June 25, 2013, 01:22:44 PM
 #18756

I'd hardly call Inflation robbing the masses, but QE meanwhile is robbing the masses.



Well, first let me say both are robbing the masses.
But, QE is not inflation at the same level of typical inflation, as the money is mostly just seeing the upper reaches of society. (e.g - Via QE, the banks are investing in bonds, the stock market, etc and most of society is not seeing that money.) I believe this can be verified with the velocity of money.
I still think QE causes some inflation, but not as much as I once thought (after reading about it).

Anyone jump in here as I'm going by what I've heard recently. And it's still a recipe for disaster.

If you increase the quantity of money, then all other things being equal, a unit of the money will be worth less: inflation.

But if you increase the supply of money and demand for the money increases, i.e. people want to hold more of it, a unit of the money may be worth more than before: deflation.

And if QE adds money to a money system where the amount of credit is collapsing the total money supply may be unchanged or even fall, so the tendency is still deflationary.

Even if a QE is not showing as inflation it still distorts the market. The QE benefits those who first get the money it represents, at the expense of those who already had savings: if it wasn't for the QE their spending power would have risen.

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June 25, 2013, 01:51:03 PM
 #18757

Hey Adam, you where saying that Bitcoin will reach $180 in 5 bussines days correct?

Well, that is 2nd july, the day of the Bitcoin London conference and i think Max Keiser is going too  Grin -> https://exante.eu/press/news/310/

So it is your secret? If yes, do you really think that the conference hype would put us at $180 or near it? Why so much confidence?  Smiley

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June 25, 2013, 01:52:00 PM
Last edit: June 25, 2013, 06:30:52 PM by sarc
 #18758

There's been suggestions that the naughty whale traders are generating most of the volume, and are even accused of creating false volume, so here's a new chart. It measures how many minutes per day trading volume was at least 100$, and so reduces the impact of large individual sells/buys (and associated activity):



conclusion: bitcoin market is emptier by the day, I hope Gox kept the receipt on their new 'smokin' fast' trading engine...
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June 25, 2013, 01:56:52 PM
 #18759

Will you have the guts to do the right thing when the pressure is on? If yes, I applaud and honor you. If not, here are a few cheap excuses to use (after all, who wants to admit conditioning or cowardice):

Without the rule of law, everything would fall apart.
Without regulation, criminals would destroy everything.
Yes, regulation is coercive, but along with it comes a certain amount of public benefit!
I got ripped off, and someone has to fix it!
If I can’t sue someone, they can get away with ripping me off!
We can’t get people to use Bitcoin unless it’s authorized.
We need approval or we will forever remain a tiny market.
A significant number of Bitcoin people will say these things (and others), but the real truth will be that they are scared, or are still hoping to get mega-rich, or just can’t rip the “government is our friend” meme out of their heads. But mostly it will be fear.

We all feel fear of course, but some of us are determined enough to do the right thing, even when we’re afraid.

So, here’s a final tip: If you run into someone who can feel the fear and still do the right thing, don’t let go of them.

you stole that from an old radical: http://www.dgcmagazine.com/the-old-radical-how-bitcoin-is-being-destroyed/ Smiley
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June 25, 2013, 02:00:08 PM
 #18760

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