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Author Topic: Purchasing Large Amounts of BTC: Which Exchange is Best?  (Read 1352 times)
BittBurger (OP)
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January 27, 2014, 05:21:12 AM
 #1

Which exchange does everyone agree is best for purchasing significant amounts of Bitcoin?

Is using an exchange even the best method, or do some people buy directly from mining pools / miners?

Thanks!

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jonanon
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January 27, 2014, 06:36:44 AM
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I'd have to say Bitstamp were the 'best', but wouldn't trust any exchange with a large amount of BTC or fiat, hence the '' around the word best.
I'd go for cash in person as long as you are meeting at a safe, neutral location and you can find someone wanting to sell.
kolev
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January 27, 2014, 07:01:02 AM
 #3

Which exchange does everyone agree is best for purchasing significant amounts of Bitcoin?
To some 10 bitcoins is significant. Cheesy Keep in mind that most exchanges have low liquidity and can go up by tens of dollars even if buy just 100 BTC, so, best would be patiently buying smaller amounts... or waiting for FBI to start auctioning the Silk Road stash, which may not be too soon though.

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DannyHamilton
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January 27, 2014, 04:07:39 PM
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https://localbitcoins.com

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Shahrukh
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January 27, 2014, 04:49:04 PM
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I'd have to say Bitstamp were the 'best', but wouldn't trust any exchange with a large amount of BTC or fiat, hence the '' around the word best.
I'd go for cash in person as long as you are meeting at a safe, neutral location and you can find someone wanting to sell.


True, I like when you said "I'd go for cash in person as long as you are meeting at a safe, neutral location" if you go someone's house with fiat they may rob you. LOL

I turned everyone down Sad Sorry for that
phr0stbyt3
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January 27, 2014, 09:04:10 PM
 #6

I trust coinbase with my life but admittedly I have never bought a large sum of coins from them. Definitely worth looking into. I would recommend them especially if you're going to buy and hold as they are not technically an exchange in the traditional sense.
AltorXP
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January 28, 2014, 12:44:39 AM
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I trust coinbase with my life but admittedly I have never bought a large sum of coins from them. Definitely worth looking into. I would recommend them especially if you're going to buy and hold as they are not technically an exchange in the traditional sense.


+1
I'd say you should take this route, rather than buying via local bitcoins (Your bank account will have a higher chance of getting frozenif you do)
DannyHamilton
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January 28, 2014, 01:50:44 PM
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I trust coinbase with my life but admittedly I have never bought a large sum of coins from them. Definitely worth looking into. I would recommend them especially if you're going to buy and hold as they are not technically an exchange in the traditional sense.
+1
I'd say you should take this route, rather than buying via local bitcoins (Your bank account will have a higher chance of getting frozen if you do)

Huh

How would your bank even know that you bought bitcoins?

I don't understand what you are saying.
phr0stbyt3
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January 28, 2014, 03:04:31 PM
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I trust coinbase with my life but admittedly I have never bought a large sum of coins from them. Definitely worth looking into. I would recommend them especially if you're going to buy and hold as they are not technically an exchange in the traditional sense.
+1
I'd say you should take this route, rather than buying via local bitcoins (Your bank account will have a higher chance of getting frozen if you do)

Huh

How would your bank even know that you bought bitcoins?

I don't understand what you are saying.

Banks now have secret branches that report any sort of suspicious activity to the government. If the activity is suspicious enough they will freeze your account "pending internal review". Withdrawing any amount close to $10,000 would be considered suspicious. I'm just assuming from the title that "large amount of btc" constitutes around $10,000 but I could be wrong.
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January 28, 2014, 03:20:21 PM
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I trust coinbase with my life but admittedly I have never bought a large sum of coins from them. Definitely worth looking into. I would recommend them especially if you're going to buy and hold as they are not technically an exchange in the traditional sense.
+1
I'd say you should take this route, rather than buying via local bitcoins (Your bank account will have a higher chance of getting frozen if you do)

Huh

How would your bank even know that you bought bitcoins?

I don't understand what you are saying.

Banks now have secret branches that report any sort of suspicious activity to the government. If the activity is suspicious enough they will freeze your account "pending internal review". Withdrawing any amount close to $10,000 would be considered suspicious. I'm just assuming from the title that "large amount of btc" constitutes around $10,000 but I could be wrong.

I was assuming that the OP already had the cash for whatever amount of bitcoin they were wanting.

Agreed, if the money is currently in a bank, and if the OP wants more than $9,000 worth, then they may trigger a CTR or a SAR upon withdrawing the cash depending on how they go about it.

Does Coinbase have a limit on how much bitcoin you can buy at once?  You may find that the bank reports your transaction to FinCEN even if you don't withdraw the cash.  Their risk assesment department might already be alerted on large transactions with companies such as Coinbase.
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