aysg76
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January 09, 2022, 01:10:31 PM |
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The harsh reality which is slowly coming in front of everyone and as soon you understand this btc is a tool to protect you against this inflation and the government bullshit and their reckless money printing scheme : And now here is bitcoin growth chart on the other side whom he's calling for complete fund loss strategy : See how they destabilize their economy themselves and put blame on others for the same but we need to understand what is beneficial for us as the true picture is with all of us. Not going to elaborate more because sometimes short sentences do make the big meanings.
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ChartBuddy
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1CBuddyxy4FerT3hzMmi1Jz48ESzRw1ZzZ
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January 09, 2022, 02:01:28 PM |
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cygan
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icarus-cards.eu
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January 09, 2022, 02:20:57 PM |
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El duderino_
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BTC + Crossfit, living life.
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January 09, 2022, 02:31:49 PM Merited by JayJuanGee (1) |
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d_eddie
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January 09, 2022, 02:41:41 PM |
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"Yes, but we can make up for that by making moar! Brrrrr! Bitcoin on the other hand has fixed cap... can't add moar... you see?" (Uh... wait a minute...)
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xhomerx10
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January 09, 2022, 02:45:32 PM Last edit: January 09, 2022, 03:19:11 PM by xhomerx10 Merited by Hueristic (1), JayJuanGee (1) |
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Well we're back to the price we were at last year at this time which means there's a year's worth of really tasty dip to be had! edit: Screw you chart buddy! Are you proclaiming that we are getting more dip, or that we already had our dip in the last year (since we are largely back to the place from which we started)? I made the graphic based on my perspective as a long-term hodler. If I had never checked the value last year, it would have appeared not to have moved... of course, I was peeking so I know it moved considerably only to return to the same value from a year ago. Funny aside: even if I hadn't peeked, I get calls and texts without fail from people I haven't heard from in months or even years which usually start with, "Hey Homer! Do you still have your bitcoin?!" every s i n g l e time we hit a fresh new ATH. The text above the graphic was meant to draw attention to the reason for the graphic (in case I hadn't made it obvious enough) without coming across as being negative because I know bitcoin will regain that ground and moar and I will get phone calls and texts from friends and colleagues who will, after my prodding at sub $100 levels, still never have purchased a single satoshi. edit: Oh the "Screw you chart buddy!" comment was due to the fact that he posted milliseconds after me so I deleted mine and reposted. I couldn't find the middle finger emoji.
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ChartBuddy
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January 09, 2022, 03:01:36 PM |
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cAPSLOCK
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Whimsical Pants
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January 09, 2022, 03:20:39 PM |
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I am always trying to attack my biases. And right now I am biased towards us not entering a crypto winter, as I have recently posted. BUT. I think I have found a scenario that might tend to undo my optimism... https://www.wsj.com/articles/fed-minutes-reflect-growing-unease-over-high-inflation-11641409628Inflation has the us Federal Reserve talking seriously about quantitative tightening. This means higher interest rates. And I think that could mean a few things: 1. The stock market is a goner if they do this. The reason we continue to see crazy upwards stonks is in great part due to the fact that they keep printing money and lowering interest rates. This could take some of the wind out of those sales. And those prices are so bubblicious already that it's hard to imagine anything but a bloodbath. 2. Bitcoin is currently seen (by most) as the king of risk investments still... so I would expect Bitcoin might follow the stock market. In some ways it's hard to say what they might do because they have painted themselves into a corner. Crashing the already limping enconomy in the name of stopping inflation? Or keep printing and shift into negative interest rates causing absolute explosions in risk assets and making a can of beans cost $4. Hmm... I kind of wish I had not had this thought... I was preferring the bullish mania I was in before...
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d_eddie
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I am always trying to attack my biases. And right now I am biased towards us not entering a crypto winter, as I have recently posted. BUT. I think I have found a scenario that might tend to undo my optimism... https://www.wsj.com/articles/fed-minutes-reflect-growing-unease-over-high-inflation-11641409628Inflation has the us Federal Reserve talking seriously about quantitative tightening. This means higher interest rates. And I think that could mean a few things: 1. The stock market is a goner if they do this. The reason we continue to see crazy upwards stonks is in great part due to the fact that they keep printing money and lowering interest rates. This could take some of the wind out of those sales. And those prices are so bubblicious already that it's hard to imagine anything but a bloodbath. 2. Bitcoin is currently seen (by most) as the king of risk investments still... so I would expect Bitcoin might follow the stock market. In some ways it's hard to say what they might do because they have painted themselves into a corner. Crashing the already limping enconomy in the name of stopping inflation? Or keep printing and shift into negative interest rates causing absolute explosions in risk assets and making a can of beans cost $4. Hmm... I kind of wish I had not had this thought... I was preferring the bullish mania I was in before... I think this has already been posted here (or where would I get it from?), but Arthur Hayes depicts the same scenario. A good read as usual. https://cryptohayes.medium.com/maelstrom-ee6021e9d0c2EDIT: I prefer the bullish mania, too.
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Copetech
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I am always trying to attack my biases. And right now I am biased towards us not entering a crypto winter, as I have recently posted. BUT. I think I have found a scenario that might tend to undo my optimism... https://www.wsj.com/articles/fed-minutes-reflect-growing-unease-over-high-inflation-11641409628Inflation has the us Federal Reserve talking seriously about quantitative tightening. This means higher interest rates. And I think that could mean a few things: 1. The stock market is a goner if they do this. The reason we continue to see crazy upwards stonks is in great part due to the fact that they keep printing money and lowering interest rates. This could take some of the wind out of those sales. And those prices are so bubblicious already that it's hard to imagine anything but a bloodbath. 2. Bitcoin is currently seen (by most) as the king of risk investments still... so I would expect Bitcoin might follow the stock market. In some ways it's hard to say what they might do because they have painted themselves into a corner. Crashing the already limping enconomy in the name of stopping inflation? Or keep printing and shift into negative interest rates causing absolute explosions in risk assets and making a can of beans cost $4. Hmm... I kind of wish I had not had this thought... I was preferring the bullish mania I was in before... To add another dimension to your well fleshed out thoughts, Federal Debt! Currently the US holds somewhere in the neighborhood of $30T of public debt. Interest to service that debt is already growing and was approximately $562B in 2021. Increasing the interest rates will draw down and likely even reverse GDP growth making the interest on Treasury Bonds skyrocket and therefore grow the interest on the debt exponentially. Therefore the only way I can see moving forward under the burden of this debt is to hyper inflate the US dollar to the point where the debt is a negligible Value, while keeping everyone convinced that everything is "just fine" so as to avoid a revolt from the lenders. (Bond Holders) Thus enters the concept of a North American CBDC to replace the US $ that is worth less than the paper it's printed on. Interesting Times Ahead...
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cAPSLOCK
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Whimsical Pants
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January 09, 2022, 04:03:10 PM |
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I am always trying to attack my biases. And right now I am biased towards us not entering a crypto winter, as I have recently posted. BUT. I think I have found a scenario that might tend to undo my optimism... https://www.wsj.com/articles/fed-minutes-reflect-growing-unease-over-high-inflation-11641409628Inflation has the us Federal Reserve talking seriously about quantitative tightening. This means higher interest rates. And I think that could mean a few things: 1. The stock market is a goner if they do this. The reason we continue to see crazy upwards stonks is in great part due to the fact that they keep printing money and lowering interest rates. This could take some of the wind out of those sales. And those prices are so bubblicious already that it's hard to imagine anything but a bloodbath. 2. Bitcoin is currently seen (by most) as the king of risk investments still... so I would expect Bitcoin might follow the stock market. In some ways it's hard to say what they might do because they have painted themselves into a corner. Crashing the already limping enconomy in the name of stopping inflation? Or keep printing and shift into negative interest rates causing absolute explosions in risk assets and making a can of beans cost $4. Hmm... I kind of wish I had not had this thought... I was preferring the bullish mania I was in before... I think this has already been posted here (or where would I get it from?), but Arthur Hayes depicts the same scenario. A good read as usual. https://cryptohayes.medium.com/maelstrom-ee6021e9d0c2EDIT: I prefer the bullish mania, too. Hayes is ov er my head for most of that, but I agree it kind of sounds like hes on the same page pretty much. Ugh.
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cAPSLOCK
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Whimsical Pants
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January 09, 2022, 04:05:33 PM |
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To add another dimension to your well fleshed out thoughts, Federal Debt! Currently the US holds somewhere in the neighborhood of $30T of public debt. Interest to service that debt is already growing and was approximately $562B in 2021. Increasing the interest rates will draw down and likely even reverse GDP growth making the interest on Treasury Bonds skyrocket and therefore grow the interest on the debt exponentially. Therefore the only way I can see moving forward under the burden of this debt is to hyper inflate the US dollar to the point where the debt is a negligible Value, while keeping everyone convinced that everything is "just fine" so as to avoid a revolt from the lenders. (Bond Holders) Thus enters the concept of a North American CBDC to replace the US $ that is worth less than the paper it's printed on. Interesting Times Ahead...
Now, THIS scenario has Bitcoin becoming ridiculously valuable in nominal dollar terms. Yeah. I think we are already IN the interesting times, and yet there is certainly more ahead as well.
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El duderino_
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BTC + Crossfit, living life.
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January 09, 2022, 04:11:30 PM Merited by heslo (5), jojo69 (1) |
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ChartBuddy
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1CBuddyxy4FerT3hzMmi1Jz48ESzRw1ZzZ
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January 09, 2022, 05:01:28 PM |
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bitebits
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Flippin' burgers since 1163.
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January 09, 2022, 05:21:02 PM |
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aesma
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January 09, 2022, 05:46:23 PM |
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Year on inflation in December 2021 6.4% in The Netherlands.
Note that house prices rose beyond 10% last year and one of the leading banks in The Netherlands expects another 12.5% increase this year.
With these figures anyone who complains that "but how can BTC be fair when those who got in early will have massive gains." is a fucking fool OR is purposefully trying to distract from the biggest problems. I want to buy a house and not only did the price rise like crazy the last couple of years, but what I'm looking for isn't even on the market anymore : a basic/average house with a large plot of land. Now to get the large plot of land at a similar or worse location, I need to literally double my budget and fork for a nicer/bigger house that I don't need (and would also cost a lot in taxes, maintenance etc.). From ~350000€ to 700000€ in one year. For 350K I get a literal ruin.
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aesma
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I am always trying to attack my biases. And right now I am biased towards us not entering a crypto winter, as I have recently posted. BUT. I think I have found a scenario that might tend to undo my optimism... https://www.wsj.com/articles/fed-minutes-reflect-growing-unease-over-high-inflation-11641409628Inflation has the us Federal Reserve talking seriously about quantitative tightening. This means higher interest rates. And I think that could mean a few things: 1. The stock market is a goner if they do this. The reason we continue to see crazy upwards stonks is in great part due to the fact that they keep printing money and lowering interest rates. This could take some of the wind out of those sales. And those prices are so bubblicious already that it's hard to imagine anything but a bloodbath. 2. Bitcoin is currently seen (by most) as the king of risk investments still... so I would expect Bitcoin might follow the stock market. In some ways it's hard to say what they might do because they have painted themselves into a corner. Crashing the already limping enconomy in the name of stopping inflation? Or keep printing and shift into negative interest rates causing absolute explosions in risk assets and making a can of beans cost $4. Hmm... I kind of wish I had not had this thought... I was preferring the bullish mania I was in before... To add another dimension to your well fleshed out thoughts, Federal Debt! Currently the US holds somewhere in the neighborhood of $30T of public debt. Interest to service that debt is already growing and was approximately $562B in 2021. Increasing the interest rates will draw down and likely even reverse GDP growth making the interest on Treasury Bonds skyrocket and therefore grow the interest on the debt exponentially. Therefore the only way I can see moving forward under the burden of this debt is to hyper inflate the US dollar to the point where the debt is a negligible Value, while keeping everyone convinced that everything is "just fine" so as to avoid a revolt from the lenders. (Bond Holders) Thus enters the concept of a North American CBDC to replace the US $ that is worth less than the paper it's printed on. Interesting Times Ahead... The plan has always been to inflate the debt away. But to do that in the "normal" way, you need to check your deficit, especially when there is growth, and only grow the debt in bad times. The US has stopped doing that, it was particularly glaring under Trump, crazy deficit despite an overheating economy (that was before COVID). I don't get why people "in the know", regardless of cryptos, are not feeling very uncomfortable with what's going on. It's clearly the case of the Fed, that why it's becoming hawkish, but if only the Fed is concerned, it won't be enough.
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Paashaas
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January 09, 2022, 05:53:12 PM |
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sirazimuth
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born once atheist
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January 09, 2022, 06:01:03 PM Last edit: January 09, 2022, 07:41:21 PM by sirazimuth |
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Well fuck, that shit is gonna screw my algorithm! I'll get u for that!Whoa, that's awesome! I never knew the vid of my class musical I starred in would be posted on YT! You can clearly see from my amazing choreographed moves, I was Michael Jackson's main influence...
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ChartBuddy
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January 09, 2022, 06:01:39 PM |
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