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Author Topic: Looks more and more like a 2011 repeat  (Read 14951 times)
Jozzaboy
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June 24, 2013, 02:32:37 PM
 #81

A quick progress update. Between peaks is 671 days




A poor analysis. You could easily draw two horizontal lines between at 100 and 140 based on the data shown. There is very significant resistance at the 100 level. It will not fall so easily.

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marvinrouge
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June 24, 2013, 05:58:02 PM
Last edit: June 24, 2013, 06:28:27 PM by marvinrouge
 #82

A quick progress update. Between peaks is 671 days




A poor analysis. You could easily draw two horizontal lines between at 100 and 140 based on the data shown. There is very significant resistance at the 100 level. It will not fall so easily.


I agree Grin This chart is not objective AT ALL
You can't compare 2 charts with different starting points. Always use a same basis.

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June 24, 2013, 06:12:14 PM
 #83

I redraw the chart with the same starting point.
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June 24, 2013, 07:02:12 PM
 #84

@ marvinrouge

As u are hopefully aware the stable lead-up price in 2013 was ~ $13, in 2011 it was ~ £1.
If you do like to a run-up aligned chart please look at post #18, if u prefer peak aligned its the very first post
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June 24, 2013, 07:12:03 PM
Last edit: June 24, 2013, 07:38:07 PM by marvinrouge
 #85

manfred thnaks for your answer
I saw your chart "run-up aligned" on post 18, I'm sorry but the chart is still not valid because the zero line of the 2 charts are not aligned.

I don't invented chart or statistics, I'm just telling you the way all people do when they need to compare 2 charts : align the zero line and align the start of the lines.


On the chart above the 2 lines begin on the same graphic point, but of course not on the same prices (must be somthing like ~$15 for 2013 and ~$0.75 for 2011).. I assume my own chart isn't very precise too  Grin
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June 24, 2013, 07:35:15 PM
 #86

manfred thnaks for your answer
I saw your chart "run-up aligned" on post 18, I'm sorry but the chart is still not valid because the zero line of the 2 charts are not aligned.

I don't invented chart or statistics, I'm just telling you the way all people do when they need to compare 2 charts : align the zero line and align the start of the lines.


On the chart above the 2 lines begin on the same graphic point, but of course not on the same prices (must be somthing like ~$15 for 2013 and ~$0.75 for 2011)..

Maybe DIY? Wink
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June 24, 2013, 07:37:09 PM
 #87

manfred thnaks for your answer
I saw your chart "run-up aligned" on post 18, I'm sorry but the chart is still not valid because the zero line of the 2 charts are not aligned.

I don't invented chart or statistics, I'm just telling you the way all people do when they need to compare 2 charts : align the zero line and align the start of the lines.


On the chart above the 2 lines begin on the same graphic point, but of course not on the same prices (must be somthing like ~$15 for 2013 and ~$0.75 for 2011)..

Maybe DIY? Wink

http://img11.hostingpics.net/pics/78241320112013.jpg   Wink
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June 26, 2013, 06:54:51 PM
 #88


This is not your typical finance though; this is really and truly revolution, on a bigger scale than has ever been comprehended.

The dot-com bubble crashed and was based on Internet. If the whole Internet wasn't strong enough to prevent any bubble crash, how something smaller like Bitcoin is supposed to do that?!?!

How does the dot-com bubble relate to the price of bitcoin? Bitcoin is not a dot-com startup.

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June 26, 2013, 07:17:46 PM
 #89


This is not your typical finance though; this is really and truly revolution, on a bigger scale than has ever been comprehended.

The dot-com bubble crashed and was based on Internet. If the whole Internet wasn't strong enough to prevent any bubble crash, how something smaller like Bitcoin is supposed to do that?!?!

How does the dot-com bubble relate to the price of bitcoin? Bitcoin is not a dot-com startup.

Well, the dot-com was a bubble and Bitcoin is also a bubble. If the dot-com, an economic ecosystem that based its potential on the Internet(which is the biggest revolution of mankind until now) was not able to sustain a bubble, I don't see how Bitcoin can sustain any bubbles either, whatever the potential of Bitcoin could be.

"Because it's Bitcoin" is not a good reason enough to change basic economics rules.
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June 26, 2013, 07:25:45 PM
 #90


This is not your typical finance though; this is really and truly revolution, on a bigger scale than has ever been comprehended.

The dot-com bubble crashed and was based on Internet. If the whole Internet wasn't strong enough to prevent any bubble crash, how something smaller like Bitcoin is supposed to do that?!?!

How does the dot-com bubble relate to the price of bitcoin? Bitcoin is not a dot-com startup.

Well, the dot-com was a bubble and Bitcoin is also a bubble. If the dot-com, an economic ecosystem that based its potential on the Internet(which is the biggest revolution of mankind until now) was not able to sustain a bubble, I don't see how Bitcoin can sustain any bubbles either, whatever the potential of Bitcoin could be.

"Because it's Bitcoin" is not a good reason enough to change basic economics rules.


I have often debated about this, I came to the conclusion that the bubble isn't necessary a bad thing. As an investor, that could be a key piece on how you decide to trade. Bubbles has repeated itself in history countless time, that is why it is wildly studied.
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June 26, 2013, 07:27:26 PM
 #91


This is not your typical finance though; this is really and truly revolution, on a bigger scale than has ever been comprehended.

The dot-com bubble crashed and was based on Internet. If the whole Internet wasn't strong enough to prevent any bubble crash, how something smaller like Bitcoin is supposed to do that?!?!

How does the dot-com bubble relate to the price of bitcoin? Bitcoin is not a dot-com startup.

Well, the dot-com was a bubble and Bitcoin is also a bubble. If the dot-com, an economic ecosystem that based its potential on the Internet(which is the biggest revolution of mankind until now) was not able to sustain a bubble, I don't see how Bitcoin can sustain any bubbles either, whatever the potential of Bitcoin could be.

"Because it's Bitcoin" is not a good reason enough to change basic economics rules.

"Because it's a bubble" isn't much of an argument either...
Brunic
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June 26, 2013, 07:42:47 PM
 #92

I have often debated about this, I came to the conclusion that the bubble isn't necessary a bad thing. As an investor, that could be a key piece on how you decide to trade. Bubbles has repeated itself in history countless time, that is why it is wildly studied.

Bubbles are not wrong or right, they are just bubbles. Like you say, they can help you to trade. My problem is with the crap of "this time it's different, it's going to change the fundamentals of economics, it's not your typical finances, it's magic!".

"Because it's a bubble" isn't much of an argument either...

I'm not the one arguing against economic phenomenons that are well documented in history.
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June 26, 2013, 07:45:15 PM
 #93

I have often debated about this, I came to the conclusion that the bubble isn't necessary a bad thing. As an investor, that could be a key piece on how you decide to trade. Bubbles has repeated itself in history countless time, that is why it is wildly studied.

Bubbles are not wrong or right, they are just bubbles. Like you say, they can help you to trade. My problem is with the crap of "this time it's different, it's going to change the fundamentals of economics, it's not your typical finances, it's magic!".

"Because it's a bubble" isn't much of an argument either...

I'm not the one arguing against economic phenomenons that are well documented in history.

Even though Bitcoin uses the Internet, it is not fundamentally the stuff of the Internet; fundamentally, it is sound money -- and this is the major difference which renders the comparison moot.  It's like saying mobile phone adoption is a bubble and the same will happen to it that happened to home phones.

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June 26, 2013, 07:50:07 PM
 #94

You forgot about the difficulty, it is growing. What's the difference, reduction of reward twice (50 => 25) or with growth 25gh to 150gh? Roll Eyes Roll Eyes

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June 26, 2013, 07:52:04 PM
 #95


This is not your typical finance though; this is really and truly revolution, on a bigger scale than has ever been comprehended.

The dot-com bubble crashed and was based on Internet. If the whole Internet wasn't strong enough to prevent any bubble crash, how something smaller like Bitcoin is supposed to do that?!?!

How does the dot-com bubble relate to the price of bitcoin? Bitcoin is not a dot-com startup.

Well, the dot-com was a bubble and Bitcoin is also a bubble. If the dot-com, an economic ecosystem that based its potential on the Internet(which is the biggest revolution of mankind until now) was not able to sustain a bubble, I don't see how Bitcoin can sustain any bubbles either, whatever the potential of Bitcoin could be.

"Because it's Bitcoin" is not a good reason enough to change basic economics rules.

"Because it's a bubble" isn't much of an argument either...

This point only applies if you ignore how a bubble is generally defined. We are past the point of being able to retrospectively identify the 2013 bubble as such. Perhaps you call a parabolic rise and fall something else, but maybe you could explain why it wasn't a bubble, since it is clear to so many that it was.
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June 26, 2013, 07:54:14 PM
 #96

Even though Bitcoin uses the Internet, it is not fundamentally the stuff of the Internet; fundamentally, it is sound money -- and this is the major difference which renders the comparison moot.  It's like saying mobile phone adoption is a bubble and the same will happen to it that happened to home phones.
Your personal view of "sound money" has no effect on the real world. You're just fantasizing.
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June 26, 2013, 07:56:28 PM
 #97


This is not your typical finance though; this is really and truly revolution, on a bigger scale than has ever been comprehended.

The dot-com bubble crashed and was based on Internet. If the whole Internet wasn't strong enough to prevent any bubble crash, how something smaller like Bitcoin is supposed to do that?!?!

How does the dot-com bubble relate to the price of bitcoin? Bitcoin is not a dot-com startup.

Well, the dot-com was a bubble and Bitcoin is also a bubble. If the dot-com, an economic ecosystem that based its potential on the Internet(which is the biggest revolution of mankind until now) was not able to sustain a bubble, I don't see how Bitcoin can sustain any bubbles either, whatever the potential of Bitcoin could be.

"Because it's Bitcoin" is not a good reason enough to change basic economics rules.

"Because it's a bubble" isn't much of an argument either...

This point only applies if you ignore how a bubble is generally defined. We are past the point of being able to retrospectively identify the 2013 bubble as such. Perhaps you call a parabolic rise and fall something else, but maybe you could explain why it wasn't a bubble, since it is clear to so many that it was.

I think we might be talking past each other (probably because I didn't sufficiently read the initial post to which Brunic was responding).  In my book, 2013 was a bubble the same way 2011 was a bubble, but bitcoin will over the term of a few years still do well, and will not only be able to sustain these values, but add to them (though in the short run my guess is it will go down some more).  I though Brunic meant with the 'cant sustain a bubble' that the current values were much higher than bitcoin is worth, but perhaps we are only quibbling over timelines here.
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June 26, 2013, 08:00:21 PM
 #98

I think we might be talking past each other (probably because I didn't sufficiently read the initial post to which Brunic was responding).  In my book, 2013 was a bubble the same way 2011 was a bubble, but bitcoin will over the term of a few years still do well, and will not only be able to sustain these values, but add to them (though in the short run my guess is it will go down some more).  Perhaps we are only quibbling over timelines here.
Likely. I'm not saying that the bubble top is not sustainable long term.
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June 26, 2013, 08:02:44 PM
 #99

Even though Bitcoin uses the Internet, it is not fundamentally the stuff of the Internet; fundamentally, it is sound money -- and this is the major difference which renders the comparison moot.  It's like saying mobile phone adoption is a bubble and the same will happen to it that happened to home phones.

There is a difference between adoption of a tool and its price. The price of Bitcoin is only one of its characteristics and is not more or less important than the security, the ease-of-use, the utility or the development of it.

Adoption means accepting the whole package of Bitcoin, with ALL its characteristics. It's possible for any characteristics to not be valued correctly in a certain period of time, and I think that it is the case with the price right now.
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June 26, 2013, 08:32:14 PM
 #100


This is not your typical finance though; this is really and truly revolution, on a bigger scale than has ever been comprehended.

The dot-com bubble crashed and was based on Internet. If the whole Internet wasn't strong enough to prevent any bubble crash, how something smaller like Bitcoin is supposed to do that?!?!

How does the dot-com bubble relate to the price of bitcoin? Bitcoin is not a dot-com startup.

Well, the dot-com was a bubble and Bitcoin is also a bubble. If the dot-com, an economic ecosystem that based its potential on the Internet(which is the biggest revolution of mankind until now) was not able to sustain a bubble, I don't see how Bitcoin can sustain any bubbles either, whatever the potential of Bitcoin could be.

"Because it's Bitcoin" is not a good reason enough to change basic economics rules.

"Because it's a bubble" isn't much of an argument either...

This point only applies if you ignore how a bubble is generally defined. We are past the point of being able to retrospectively identify the 2013 bubble as such. Perhaps you call a parabolic rise and fall something else, but maybe you could explain why it wasn't a bubble, since it is clear to so many that it was.

You could define a bubble as a parabolic rise and fall afterwards, and according to that definition we've definitely seen a bubble recently in bitcoin. However, this definition does not say how deep the fall should be, so it doesnt work as an argument to back up one's belief that the current price is still not sustainable and the price has to fall some more. You can make a somewhat educated guess, but that's all it is and it's definitely not guaranteed to come true.

Bitcoin = Gold on steroids
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