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Author Topic: Merchants that accept Bitcoin and settle in USD are driving the price down  (Read 3869 times)
tenthirtyone
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January 10, 2014, 04:35:26 AM
 #21

Better still, get Overstock employees to accept bitcoin instead of fiat.

Technically, wouldn't that mean they would pay taxes on that. Thus leading to higher paid employees and new talent =D
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zagerfish
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January 10, 2014, 08:09:54 AM
 #22

I would think the day Amazon starts accepting bitcoin is the day the price of bitcoin jumps through the freaking roof.
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January 10, 2014, 09:07:15 AM
 #23

OP has repeatedly said "driving the price down", I believe this is all he is concerned with Wink

I would happily settle for a steady drop in value EVERY YEAR, in exchange for mass adoption. People using bitcoins to buy things is healthy for bitcoins. This would take all the speculation out, and generate real sustainable transactional demand for bitcoins.

It would spell disaster for large bitcoin holders in the short term, but eventually, I believe transactional demand will fuel bitcoins prices back to current levels anyway, and it will be a more robust environment than what we currently have now.
gannicus
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January 10, 2014, 09:23:50 AM
Last edit: January 10, 2014, 12:40:17 PM by gannicus
 #24

So, according to OP and some of you guys, if BTC is massively adopted under this "accept BTC and sells it for USD" system, the price will collapse. Suppose more and more companies start accepting it, the price will go down more and more, lets say 10 USD each. Then, any company willing to do a 210 mln USD transaction would be able to buy all existing BTC (because in your guys logic the part where the buyer must buy the bitcoins so the company may dump it is simply forgotten
 Yeah, the part where most bitcoins anyone holds now were bought and not mined - they are not the "first owners", that is what I mean - is ignored.). Pratically all coins spent and later "dumped" will have to be bought for USD from someone who did the same. The amount of "first spenders" relatively to the rest will become less and less relevant in terms of volume to a point where all coins must be bought for USD before being "dumped", which will annulate this effect (when I say USD it can be any other currency), unless people start holding BTC (the amount that can be mined is limited, so at a certain point you either bought them or earned them by other means than mining), which will drive price UP, and not down. The conclusion that mass adoption followed by currency convertion leads to a collapse in its value leads to this absurd conclusion: if increasing adoption reduces price, then we will certainly arrive to a point where an individual or a group can buy all of them. But how can that happen in a mass adoption environment? Who would sell "the last BTC"?
 
Akka
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January 10, 2014, 09:33:03 AM
 #25

OP has repeatedly said "driving the price down", I believe this is all he is concerned with Wink

I would happily settle for a steady drop in value EVERY YEAR, in exchange for mass adoption. People using bitcoins to buy things is healthy for bitcoins. This would take all the speculation out, and generate real sustainable transactional demand for bitcoins.

It would spell disaster for large bitcoin holders in the short term, but eventually, I believe transactional demand will fuel bitcoins prices back to current levels anyway, and it will be a more robust environment than what we currently have now.

Well said.

Bitcoin is not a get rich quick scheme, where everyone just buys and holds until no one is left to buy. If Bitcoin is used and this leads to higher liquidity on the BTC side on exchanges (or a constant inflow of coins that are sold), it's a very good thing and will make it harder for it to Bubble like crazy. If the price goes down due to that, that only means the current price was unsubstainable anyway.

All previous versions of currency will no longer be supported as of this update
tanatos
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January 10, 2014, 09:46:47 AM
 #26

Theres alot of people encouraging new companies to use Bitpay or Coinbase as merchant solutions, just so they can accept the currency and they can take no risk. The problem with this is that it drives the price down.

Users who pay with bitcoin, have had that bitcoin, meaning they didn't just buy it to spend. Only a few are buying bitcoin just to immediately spend it.

For the people who already have bitcoin, when they spend it at these merchants who are using Bitpay or Coinbase, and settle in USD, they are just driving the price down.



Overstock.com - They accept Bitcoin, they probably did so many transactions today, but all of those coins were dumped on the market. Thus driving the price down. Imagine how many bitcoins they made today, but they didn't hold onto any of them, instead they just dumped all those coins. Anyone who paid in Bitcoin on Overstock today, pretty much just helped lower the price.



The fiat money, which overstock actually accepts, has to come from somewhere. This means someone has to go and buy those BTC used to purchase stuff from overstock. So you have an ongoing "circulation" and people buying BTC signifies a demand for it, which means a higher value for BTC, which means "cheaper" (relatively speaking) items on overstock, which means people might be motivated to buy more BTC,...etc

Which also means nothing happens without using fiat money.

And in case people do not buy BTC the price would ofc go down or in case large quantities of BTC are used to "play" with the market. But this second possibility is more of a problem when it comes to top 10 BTC holders.

byt411
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January 10, 2014, 09:47:13 AM
 #27

The whole problem is that the governments are panicking about bitcoin, and they are labelling it as a "High Risk Investment Product", while it's actually a new type of currency that can substitute the current ones. That is why many don't accept Bitcoin, since its price can fluctuate a lot.
minimalB
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January 10, 2014, 10:13:27 AM
 #28

Anyone who buys something on overstock/elswhere will see Bitcoin as an option when he/she checks out.

This could lead to:
- he/she checking out what the hack this Bitcoin thing is
- it may open a debate between colleagues that otherwise would never happen
- every-time solid merchant adopts it, it gains credibility
- etc.

I think it's a very good thing, especially long term.
ljudotina
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January 10, 2014, 11:21:08 AM
 #29

OP is forgetting some really important stuff.

When large retailers open up for BTC, they will attract more people into BTC. All those new people will have to buy that BTC somewhere which will drive price up, and once they buy stuff, retailer will sell BTC and drive price back to where it was. So at worst, price will stay the same.
But there is one very important thing. Just like with everything, people wont buy EXACT ammout of BTC they need. They will in most cases buy round numbers and spend part by part, which will in turn drive price up more as some part of BTC will stay at private wallets for further shopping.

For BTC to be viable on world market, it needs to spread, and once it spreads, more retailers will use it as larger amount of shoppers will have it, and when larger amount of shoppers have it, price will definitly go UP.

Raghnar
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January 10, 2014, 11:32:26 AM
 #30

Yes when someone buys something with BTC, it gets converted back to USD in many cases but how do you think they get the BTC in the first place?  They usually have to buy it, which drives the price up.

And the point is that they more people who are using BTC, the more people are holding it at any one time and that means less supply on the market and higher BTC prices.
byt411
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January 10, 2014, 02:09:56 PM
 #31

The point is, Bitcoin wasn't designed for merchants to accept payment in BTC and then convert into USD to pay for employees. It is designed to completely replace the whole monetary system, and unless that happens, nothing will work.
johnyj
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January 10, 2014, 03:04:56 PM
 #32

Everything you bought with bitcoin will just like that pizza, become the most expensive xxx in human history after a couple of years. So even all the merchants accept bitcoin payment, it won't be used at large scale today

We are still in the early days of adoption, so does the volatility. If bitcoin reached certain degree of market saturation, then price will be stabilized and more and more people will start to use it as a payment medium, and there will be less need to convert to local currency

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January 10, 2014, 03:08:12 PM
 #33

OP has repeatedly said "driving the price down", I believe this is all he is concerned with Wink

I would happily settle for a steady drop in value EVERY YEAR, in exchange for mass adoption. People using bitcoins to buy things is healthy for bitcoins. This would take all the speculation out, and generate real sustainable transactional demand for bitcoins.

It would spell disaster for large bitcoin holders in the short term, but eventually, I believe transactional demand will fuel bitcoins prices back to current levels anyway, and it will be a more robust environment than what we currently have now.


I'm sorry but are you retarded? Glad to see you're such a humanitarian that you are willing to lose money out of your own pocket and decrease your overall buying power in exchange for adoption. Who the fuck would get into bitcoin if the value drops steadily every year




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medUSA
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January 10, 2014, 04:07:10 PM
 #34

I'm sorry but are you retarded? Glad to see you're such a humanitarian that you are willing to lose money out of your own pocket and decrease your overall buying power in exchange for adoption. Who the fuck would get into bitcoin if the value drops steadily every year

All the answers to you questions are already in my post you quoted Smiley

I don't expect you to understand it, cos juding by what you have said, you are obviously in bitcoin purely for investment purposes.

Calling names wouldn't get you anywhere, learn to read and think. Think forex, think devaluation, think inflation, think Euros and Yen.
Patel (OP)
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January 10, 2014, 04:10:45 PM
 #35

you are obviously in bitcoin purely for investment purposes.

most of us are in it for investment purposes. you act like you would still be here if the price was forever in decline.

investment purpose = store of value, currency use, or anything that has value.

being in bitcoin for investment purposes is not a bad thing. people shouldn't try to act like they aren't in it because of the exceptional ROI.

There is only a small percentage of people who aren't in it for investment purposes, and those are the miners who got coins at almost free. Everyone else invested.  So of course the price matters.
Patel (OP)
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January 10, 2014, 04:11:32 PM
 #36

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