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Question: What happens first:
New ATH - 43 (69.4%)
<$60,000 - 19 (30.6%)
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Author Topic: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion  (Read 26372292 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.)
JorgeStolfi
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February 16, 2014, 12:20:06 PM
 #89721


My picture of the typical Huobi client is a low or middle-class person, who does not understand English, has no programming knowledge, and keeps his bitcoins in his Huobi account.  He cannot use bitcoins to pay for things in China and does not usually travel outside the country.

Is this peer-revieewed science?


Obviously not, but it is not pure guess either. I read somewhere an article discussing why Bitcoin became so popular in China, and it hinted at that sort of demographics.

If you are referring to my question about needing a wallet to open an account at Huobi, I already answered that.  I had asked because someone suggested that wallet app download statistics could be a way to estimate the number of active clients in each country.  I believe it is not a reliable indicator.

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Bitcoin mining is now a specialized and very risky industry, just like gold mining. Amateur miners are unlikely to make much money, and may even lose money. Bitcoin is much more than just mining, though!
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February 16, 2014, 12:22:42 PM
 #89722

i love bit coin, have my 6 btc stuck on gox that could have been 25 btc had i not paid the 200$ premium to get OUT of gox and waited a week with my full fiat balance, but then got stuck in limbo for 1.5 weeks before deemed totally unwithdrawable, surprise! goxxed, goxxed, goxxed and goxxed

Even those of you on bitstamp holding btc right now I'm scratching my head as to why you haven't sold, 400$ price difference at this point lmao... gox is obviously a roach motel and I'd be lucky to get my profit BTC out of them.  Now i'm at 0 profit looking for a new buy in on stamp.

Put this in perspective, you have got the exchange feeding into bloomberg reporting sub 266 prices.. You have the one exchange paying out 400$ above the quoted (shit) mtgox exchange

You have bit coins in wallets flowing into bitstamp just in case

If Gox goes down totally, price will plummet everywhere

If gox opens with drawals people who picked up 260$ bit coins will instantly go for 400$ profit on an exchange that allows $ with drawls

Where exactly is the upside of holding btc now, except for if your btc is stuck on gox?

If you're on bitstamp and haven't sold yet I'm not sure what's going through your head
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February 16, 2014, 12:23:57 PM
 #89723

OK. I just logged into Gox to try out the withdrawal rumour (and move my massive stash Wink ) and I notice I received a login authorization email - that's never happened before.

This (perhaps) suggests that they have implemented some additional user features this week and that (perhaps) the news tomorrow will be positive.

Gox said they're would be an update on the 16th, they we're testing the withdrawal system internal first before going live, and there is now less than 3 hrs in the day left, Cheesy Hopefully they work down to the wire.


Press release says update on Monday, so the 17th

https://www.mtgox.com/img/pdf/20140215-BTC-transfers.pdf
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February 16, 2014, 12:29:11 PM
 #89724

Down the rabbit hole we go..
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February 16, 2014, 12:33:02 PM
 #89725

OK. I just logged into Gox to try out the withdrawal rumour (and move my massive stash Wink ) and I notice I received a login authorization email - that's never happened before.

This (perhaps) suggests that they have implemented some additional user features this week and that (perhaps) the news tomorrow will be positive.

Gox said they're would be an update on the 16th, they we're testing the withdrawal system internal first before going live, and there is now less than 3 hrs in the day left, Cheesy Hopefully they work down to the wire.


Press release says update on Monday, so the 17th

https://www.mtgox.com/img/pdf/20140215-BTC-transfers.pdf

your correct I still jumped the gun lol,

check what time it is in japan Cheesy almost the 17th lol
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February 16, 2014, 12:33:07 PM
 #89726

ATH broken. Reenactment of April 10 flashcrash?
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February 16, 2014, 12:34:11 PM
 #89727

9:33pm here on Sunday.

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February 16, 2014, 12:34:39 PM
 #89728

We got some bulls!
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February 16, 2014, 12:36:20 PM
 #89729

We got some bulls!

All we need is some balls
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February 16, 2014, 12:37:24 PM
 #89730

under which circumstance would you conclude that you have been wrong?

I think I already answered that earlier today or yesterday...

Can you describe what would qualify as: a) a "success" of Bitcoin

I will be happy, and count it as a success, if bitcoin becomes a viable and attractive alternative to credit cards for legal international payments via internet.  By "attractve" I mean one that many people will chose to use for its merits (convenience, price, safety, etc.), not for political motives or because they have invested in Bitcoins and want to encourage merchants.

Right now it is very far from that landmark, wouldn't you agree? Already I know that I will not be able to pay a hotel bill in China, for example.

b) Bitcoin being a good investment.

Buying a lottery ticket is always a bad investment, because one can compute the expected payoff, and it is negative.

If one buys a ticket and wins the jackpot, still was a bad investment. 

A good investment is one that, according to the best knowledge and judgement available at the time, gives a positive expectation of return.  But there is no way to measure the probability of an event, either before or after the fact.  Therefore, there is no way to determine empirically that something is a good investment before the fact, and no way to tell whether if it was a good investment after the fact.

Only in very few cases cases --- such as lotteries and other games --- there are proabilities that everyone would agree to, and therefore one can "prove" that something is a bad or good investment.  Most of the time, probablities are subjective and personal, and so is the notion of "good investment" or "bad investment".

If someone invests in Bitcoin and gets filthy rich, good for him; but can you tell whether he was wise, or just lucky but stupid?

Last year the Brazilian oil company OGX filed for bankruptcy.  Its stock price had multiplied by 10x in a couple of years (from 2 BRL to 24 BRL, if I recall correctly), which is fantastic in that market.  Then it crashed in a few days, after it became known that its two deep-sea oil wells were nowhere as productive as it was hoped.  Its shares are still traded today as a penny stock, 0,15 BRL in november, 0.30 BRL now.

OGX had several billion dollars of real money invested into it by many people. Were those people bad investors? I would not say so, they apparently did their homework and got positive expected value at the time. 

Some of the original investors must have sold at the peak and made 1000% profit, some didn't and had 100% loss.  Were the former better investors than the latter?

Or, to be more dramatic -- someone plays Russian Roulette ten times for a 10$ bet, and wins. Would you call that person a good investor?

(That reminds me of a great little movie called /Number 13/ -- not to be confused with /Number 23/.  But I saw the French BW original, cannot vouch for the remake.)


Late reply, because, well, time zones. Not sure if we can pick up the discussion again.

My first question was, when would you consider Bitcoin a success. So "success" of btc would be, in your eyes, it being a useful (independent of political ambitions) Internet payment system. Fair enough.

It is, in my opinion, a bit silly to be *negative* about this aspect after a) btc only being around 5 years, and b) after a number of rather positive developments in the past 2 years.

To go into more detail: True, you cannot pay for your hotel room in China yet with Bitcoin, but that would have been a bit like asking Tim Berners-Lee, after he introduced you to HTTP, if you can already stream high-quality porn on it. He couldn't, so why not continue using VHS, you could have said. No improvement there.

I'm being a bit facetious here, but I'm sure you'll get my point: there is a time to declare an attempt dead (like, say, Sanger's Citizendium, which started with a great idea to improve on Wikipedia's sometimes anti-academic climate, but which is absolutely going *nowhere*, for years), and then there's *prematurely* declaring something dead. If you already want to declare our little experiment failed, 5 years after introduction, after reaching a market cap north of 10B USD, VC funding probably in the range of a few hundred million USD, and a so far small, but not completely uninteresting group of merchants accepting BTC, then I think that squarely falls under "prematurely declaring it dead".

In other words: being skeptic is recommended. And if the question is, "should you invest in it?", then there are good reasons *not* to invest... there's still a very real chance btc will be replaced by an alternative currency, or will only stay marginally useful. But that's the answer to the question "should I put my money into it, right now". Which is heavily dependent on your personal risk preferences. While the question that you seem to bring is subtly different: do we have evidence that Bitcoin is going nowhere/is most likely going to fail. And for that, I have yet to see any real evidence (neither the US nor the EU have taken a prohibitive stance towards it, not major flaw in the protocol has been revealed -- those would be "catastrophic" events, imo).


About your 2nd point, in response to my question, when Bitcoin would be a good investment, you answered that you cannot determine the probabilities of an event like how btc will develop, so any post hoc reasoning is moot, and then you go on to compare it to Russian roulette.

That is a straw man if I have ever seen one. According to that strict interpretation of probabilities and their application to real life events, *all* investments are equally good or bad, and there is no way to make an informed decision.

And just like that, our market driven economy just crumbled to dust. Hope you're happy now Tongue

Where I'm going with this is:

Cut out the investing rationale. Simply *assume* for a moment that (through intuition, or TA) an investor has a way to roughly predict the price function of USD/BTC. My question was: which USD/BTC price function would qualify as a good investment of that (perhaps hypothetically knowledgeable) investor.

Obviously, if price kept on falling now, never to reach 1000 USD again, everyone who invested in the last 3 months could conclude it was a bad investment. If however price recovers, and keeps on rising, there is really no meaningful way to declare it a "bad investment" until at some point it doesn't recover anymore.

That was my idea behind the second question: if there simply never is a point during our life time where btc price will fall so drastically that it never recovers, then it is plain bizarre to call it a "bad investment" in retrospect. The comparison to lotterey tickets or Russian roulette is not applicable, because in those cases the EV is known to be negative, while in all economic decisions, the probabilities are not known, and the risk one takes on in investing is directly related to the possible returns he expects to see.

So that *still* doesn't say you should invest in btc, but it is at odds with assumptions about economical behavior made in any other market to basically say that, no matter how btc price develops, it will never "have been a good investment, because it was impossible to know the chance of success ahead of time".

In even simpler terms: if, say, investing early on in Microsoft was  a "good investment", then investing in Bitcoin (until now, unless we never recover from this correction) was a "good investment" as well. If, on the other hand, because of the inherent uncertainty re: outcomes investing in Bitcoin can never be a good investment, then investing in MSFT wasn't a good investment either. And in that case, all of stock trading essentially became meaningless.




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February 16, 2014, 12:37:42 PM
 #89731

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February 16, 2014, 12:37:55 PM
 #89732

If anyone still have fiat stuck on Gox, please PM me and I will get it out for you at 100%. I can only do this for fiat.

lol
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February 16, 2014, 12:38:08 PM
 #89733

LOL, are we going to $1 to Gox? Some sellers are insane.
Pretty awesome. Cheesy
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February 16, 2014, 12:39:56 PM
 #89734

@erdogan:

This is the article I was referring to. The author does not seem to be completely clueless about China.
[WARNING] besides being a bit old, the article is very anti-bitcoin. [/WARNING]

http://www.scmp.com/comment/insight-opinion/article/1404497/bitcoin-bubble-wont-last-without-beijings-approval?page=all
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February 16, 2014, 12:41:46 PM
 #89735

ATH broken. Reenactment of April 10 flashcrash?


i was fearing it would break ath myself. but...  it is not really a functioning market at gox. the price there is not the real price. so it actually does not imply anything.


edit: besides the complete detachment of the gox universe
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February 16, 2014, 12:42:49 PM
 #89736

247! whee! i bought back in at 920 !!
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February 16, 2014, 12:45:00 PM
 #89737

If you're on bitstamp and haven't sold yet I'm not sure what's going through your head

I haven't sold because we really don't know what's going on exactly at MtGox. This makes the market really unpredictable, nobody here knows how far Gox is going to slide down and what the manipulators with inside knowledge are planning there. If I had any fiat left on Bitstamp I would probably be placing my buy orders around the $550 mark and ready to do a market buy if MtGox comes out with positive news tomorrow. But I just don't feel like gambling with the coins I have right now, I really don't want to end up with fewer coins after this is all over.
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February 16, 2014, 12:45:15 PM
 #89738

Might get my $4 coin after all...

Getting it out is another story all together though.
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February 16, 2014, 12:45:26 PM
 #89739

Gosh would I love to have cash on gox right now. Stamp is so boring if you are waiting to buy.
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February 16, 2014, 12:50:29 PM
 #89740

No worries.. All those Gox dump manipulators will head towards bitstamp once withdraws work again, if ever.  Grin

So, how the stamp will feel like then?
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