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Author Topic: Is Bitcoin antifragile?  (Read 492 times)
hatshepsut93
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April 08, 2020, 06:48:00 PM
 #21


Actually, the recent crash demonstrates that Bitcoin is quite antifragile

Its price as of today is the same as it was just 3 months ago, so we can't even say that Bitcoin crashed and never came up. Of course it crashed but it was an obvious and outrageous market manipulation on the part of BitMEX. Did it hurt Bitcoin? It definitely hurt Bitcoin traders (with some of them likely losing millions in the process) but did it undermine their faith in the cryptocurrency as such?


Bitcoin fell because the stock market fell, and now it recovered because it also recovered. This is the opposite of "antifragile", since it follows the stocks/global economy instead of being a hedge against it. You can't pin it all on BitMex alone, if this was the case Bitcoin would be crashing and pumping like that every week - it was clearly a correlation with the stock market that reacted to governments declaring quarantine.

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April 08, 2020, 07:07:30 PM
 #22

If you don't know what antifragility is, as Nassem Taleb defines it, you may want to read his book on the subject matter

Put succinctly, antifragility with respect to Bitcoin refers to its becoming stronger as everything else around it tumbles and falls apart. Well, as Taleb himself points out, there's no absolute antifragility, and it necessarily comes at the expense of something else, the latter being the source of antifragility as such. For example, humanity as a whole becomes more resistant to Covid-19 specifically because some people die from it (natural selection at work)

So the question is, if Bitcoin is antifragile (which seems to be the case in certain or even most life circumstances), what does its antifragility come from? As recent events have shown (e.g. the coronavirus pandemic), Bitcoin gains where regular currencies fail, especially cash payments, or even when it itself takes a hit (e.g. BitMEX's little shenanigans). But that's definitely not the only reason which gives rise to, and more generally facilitates, its antifragile nature

I would like to look into this matter deeper and in greater detail - with your help, of course. Please share your thoughts



Unfortunately if the natural selection we are talking about will go according to a virus which can mutate anytime I do not think we will have a better chance of surviving this selection that you are taking about 😂.

But more or so Bitcoins is not antifragile but a certain degree of stability is provided by the fact that the price of Bitcoins is invariably changed by the individual people , which is not controlled by any body , so it stays in balance somehow most of the times.

But this also have certain exceptions :- like when whales decides to increase or decrease the price , it certainly makes a huge difference and creates problem for the community.

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April 08, 2020, 07:22:12 PM
 #23

We're nowhere near that point yet, since people still peg Bitcoin to the USD

You likely meant to say they value Bitcoin in USD, right?

They most certainly do, and so what? Gold is valued in dollars too (or whatever), but can we say that it doesn't have "value in and of itself"? If we can say so (let's assume that for a moment), then how does the dollar itself have any value at all in the first place? Anyway you come to think of it, the dollar valuation is not relevant to the question

Further, and I said that in the OP, there's no all-out antifragility (Taleb says essentially the same, just in case). To be more specific, we saw BitMEX triggering massive liquidations of long positions (like 1B dollar worth liquidated). So here's the question, did this make Bitcoin stronger or weaker, and why exactly?

I'm saying Bitcoin is still measure in USD, which means it practically has a floating dollar peg.

In order for Bitcoin to be truly anti-fragile, I would say it needs to have value in and of itself, or be the peg. e.g. USD should be pegged in Bitcoin, not vice-versa.
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April 08, 2020, 07:41:05 PM
 #24

Unfortunately if the natural selection we are talking about will go according to a virus which can mutate anytime I do not think we will have a better chance of surviving this selection that you are taking about

This virus is nothing compared to what humanity went through (smallpox, plague, polio, to name but just a few)

Regardless, as the overall opinion seems to be mostly anti antifragile, could anyone come up with anything which would however remotely count as antifragile, whatever that might be? Just to make sure that we go a little bit beyond a simple "I do not agree with this"

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April 08, 2020, 10:54:21 PM
 #25

Unfortunately if the natural selection we are talking about will go according to a virus which can mutate anytime I do not think we will have a better chance of surviving this selection that you are taking about

This virus is nothing compared to what humanity went through (smallpox, plague, polio, to name but just a few)

Regardless, as the overall opinion seems to be mostly anti antifragile, could anyone come up with anything which would however remotely count as antifragile, whatever that might be? Just to make sure that we go a little bit beyond a simple "I do not agree with this"


Agreed re terrible viruses mankind has had to deal with over the millennia.

*   *   *

Re antifragile, I believe the concept of "antifragile" can be looked at as a matter of degree.  That is, something might be more antifragile (in relation to the stock market say) or less so.  In that sense, BTC is clearly antifragile, it tends to be relatively stronger as other assets are often weaker.  Not a 100% (inverse) correlation, but BTC has held up well all things considered.

There are no assets I can think of right now that is 100% inversely-correlated with other assets.

N. N. Taleb himself has written that gold is antifragile.  

Gold is some 10% - 11% below its all-time high price (US$, ATH in 2011).  Our (US) stock market would be some 19% below (ATH in February 2020).  Gold is inversely correlated with stocks, though not 100%.  BTC is down some 63% from its ATH in late 2017.  Note that all three of these asset classes reached their ATH's in completely different years.


Great thread, by the way.
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April 08, 2020, 11:06:57 PM
 #26

...

Charts of BTC, DJI (US stocks, Dow Jones Industrial Index) and Gold.  I like looking longer-term, but perhaps the proper period to examine would be Jan 2017 until now (as BTC prices are hard to read before then):

https://finviz.com/crypto_charts.ashx?t=BTCUSD&tf=w1

https://finviz.com/futures_charts.ashx?t=YM&p=w1

https://finviz.com/futures_charts.ashx?t=GC&p=w1


Careful examination of the charts would show substantial performance differences.


(Edited)

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April 09, 2020, 04:48:56 AM
 #27

Put succinctly, antifragility with respect to Bitcoin refers to its becoming stronger as everything else around it tumbles and falls apart.
I would like to look into this matter deeper and in greater detail - with your help, of course. Please share your thoughts

There are powerful financial interests who want and desperately need to "prove" that bitcoin and gold should not be considered safe havens.

These financial interests are willing to spend an inordinate amount of fiat money on discrediting alternatives to the fiat banking system.

For example, these financial interests accumulate lots of borrowed and paper gold and then dump massive amounts of fake gold during a stock-market downturn to depress the gold price exactly at that point in time.

They also do that with bitcoin. Centralized exchanges are more than happy to lend out their users' bitcoins for a fee to financial manipulators. Therefore, as long a the market capitalization of fiat values is relatively large compared to bitcoin and gold, it will be possible for financial fiat interests to "prove" that bitcoin and gold are not safe havens. In fact, given the fact that the total market cap of bitcoin is still much smaller than the one for gold, it is even easier to manipulate the bitcoin price than the gold price.

Bitcoin still survives in spite of all these financial assaults.

Therefore, the flight into alternatives will be exponentially slow at the beginning. It will take a prolonged depression in fiat values along with long, robust performance of bitcoin before the flight into bitcoin will be able to commence in all earnest.
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April 09, 2020, 06:34:06 AM
 #28

Gold is some 10% - 11% below its all-time high price (US$, ATH in 2011).  Our (US) stock market would be some 19% below (ATH in February 2020).  Gold is inversely correlated with stocks, though not 100%.  BTC is down some 63% from its ATH in late 2017.  Note that all three of these asset classes reached their ATH's in completely different years.

comparing all time highs like this is wrong if you ask me. specially since bitcoin's ATH value that you used was a massive bubble that popped and since day traders are making profit on both rise and fall the fall always takes a very long time and goes deep. that is not true about other assets such as gold's rise.

besides if you remove the bubble and its burst and then look at the price you can see that bitcoin, unlike everything else had a massive rise!
gold started 2017 with $1,162 and it is now $1,680 ->  44%
bitcoin started 2017 with $885 and it is now $7300 -> 724%

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April 09, 2020, 08:38:19 AM
 #29

Re antifragile, I believe the concept of "antifragile" can be looked at as a matter of degree.

I pointed that out right away

And Taleb specifically emphasizes that point as well. Antifragility is possible only within a range on a certain continuum, and it necessarily comes at the expense of something else, either from inside or outside. This is a crucial point which can be generalized to cryptocurrencies, and then looked into. More specifically, this topic is about finding out and examining the circumstances and conditions under which Bitcoin reveals its antifragile nature, i.e. when it gains and becomes stronger from the chaos and turmoil outside, or even from within (from being bitmexed and goxed)

N. N. Taleb himself has written that gold is antifragile

That was a loaded question

Really, how can you constructively disagree with something if you don't even understand the whole idea as this thread clearly proves? Taleb highlights that living systems are the best examples of antifragility. However, he goes on for pages how he couldn't come up with a term to describe this phenomenon when the fittest term (pun intended) is obviously evolutionary? Living systems thrive in a volatile and chaotic environment for the simple reason it is likely the only way to increase the external entropy and decrease their own, i.e. essentially the only way to get on

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April 09, 2020, 09:42:33 AM
 #30

OP, it's going there, but WHEN should we consider it in an "anti-fragile state"? Until its "out of beta"? I believe the only way when Bitcoin is considered "out of beta", is if mining is supported 100% by transaction fees.

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April 09, 2020, 09:56:38 AM
Last edit: April 10, 2020, 11:28:34 AM by deisik
Merited by vapourminer (1)
 #31

It's going there, but when should we consider it in an "anti-fragile state"? Until it's "out of beta"? I believe the only way when Bitcoin is considered "out of beta", is if mining is supported 100% by transaction fees

I don't think it has any practical relevance or importance

Bitcoin (or anything else, for that matter) is either antifragile or not in particular circumstances and under specific conditions (those which affect it). Whether it is officially in alpha, beta, or whatever has little to do with that. It is its behavior under stress that counts, whether it becomes stronger or weaker in the process and in the aftermath of a certain situation. The point is in finding and looking into things which make it more resilient and which less so

To make things somewhat simpler and easier to understand, we can narrow down the possible range of circumstances under which Bitcoin would reveal its antifragile nature, or lack thereof, to just two particular events. Did Bitcoin become stronger in the long run after the Mt.Gox collapse, and is it going to become stronger after BitMEX has pulled off their little trick with triggering massive liquidations?

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April 09, 2020, 04:40:33 PM
Merited by deisik (1), pooya87 (1)
 #32

Re antifragile, I believe the concept of "antifragile" can be looked at as a matter of degree.

I pointed that out right away

And Taleb specifically emphasizes that point as well. Antifragility is possible only within a range on a certain continuum, and it necessarily comes at the expense of something else, either from inside or outside. This is a crucial point which can be generalized to cryptocurrencies, and then looked into. More specifically, this topic is about finding out and examining the circumstances and conditions under which Bitcoin reveals its antifragile nature, i.e. when it gains and becomes stronger from the chaos and turmoil outside, or even from within (from being bitmexed and goxed)

N. N. Taleb himself has written that gold is antifragile

That was a loaded question

Really, how can you constructively disagree with something if you don't even understand the whole idea as this thread clearly proves? Taleb highlights that living systems are the best examples of antifragility. However, he goes on for pages how he couldn't come up with a term to describe this phenomenon when the fittest term (pun intended) is obviously evolutionary? Living systems thrive in a volatile and chaotic environment for the simple reason it is likely the only way to increase the external entropy and decrease their own, i.e. essentially the only way to get on



Hi deisik

It's been a long time since I read Taleb's Antifragile, although the book is still sitting within my eyesight now up there on my bookshelf.  It looks like we do not disagree re BTC and gold being antifragile to the mainstream financial system.

Antifragile investments are a good diversification.  And whether the inverse correlation with other investments is very strong or less so is not important to me, they act as hedges, at least in part.  Good enough for my purposes.

*   *   *

pooya87

I only mentioned ATHs as one of several indicators that can be looked at to make a rough assessment of price correlations.  BTC has not been an investible asset (suitable for the somewhat mainstream people) since +/- Jan 2017 (I got in around 2014).  So the time periods I chose reflect the longest period of time I thought proper for an initial look to see what aspects of "antifragile" price behavior I could tease out during the same period (Jan 2017 - now) for gold, BTC and stocks.  Look, I understand that is imperfect analysis, but comparing BTC to assets that have been around longer has its problems.

Looking at the ATHs does have some value, IMO.  I am not saying that there may not be better indicators, I'm sure there are.  I cannot and do not claim to any extraordinary expertise in examining asset classes.  

deisik's thread here has been useful to me to look at how these three classes have worked out in the past three years.  For me, that's value.
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April 10, 2020, 08:28:48 AM
 #33

It's going there, but when should we consider it in an "anti-fragile state"? Until it's "out of beta"? I believe the only way when Bitcoin is considered "out of beta", is if mining is supported 100% by transaction fees

I don't think it has any practical relevance or importance

Bitcoin (or anything else, for that matter) is either antifragile or not in particular circumstances and under specific conditions. Whether it is officially in alpha, beta, or whatever has little to do with that. It is its behavior under stress that counts, whether it becomes stronger or weaker in the process and in the aftermath of a certain situation. The point is in finding and looking into things which make it more resilient and which less

To make things somewhat simpler and easier to understand, we can narrow down the possible range of circumstances under which Bitcoin would reveal its antifragile nature, or lack thereof, to just two particular events. Did Bitcoin become stronger in the long run after the Mt.Gox collapse, and is it going to become stronger after BitMEX has pulled off their little trick with triggering massive liquidations?


OK, if you truly want to isolate "anti-fragility" on its performance in the market after bearish events, then obviously, your answers are, YES and YES.

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April 10, 2020, 10:38:51 AM
 #34

Bitcoin fell because the stock market fell, and now it recovered because it also recovered. This is the opposite of "antifragile", since it follows the stocks/global economy instead of being a hedge against it.

+1. in fact, BTC fell much harder than the stock market, and is still down much more. looks pretty damn fragile to me! Cheesy

the whole concept of antifragility is rather questionable and is hardly documented outside of nassim taleb's invention. its application to bitcoin is even more questionable, although i will concede the possibility could exist if bitcoin had an exponentially larger network effect than it currently does. as it stands, the idea is laughable.

people like nassim taleb because he's ridiculously opinionated and talks never ending shit, but he's crazy.

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April 10, 2020, 11:14:27 AM
Merited by deisik (1)
 #35

I'm pretty sure it is? Just looking at how it's progressed over the decade has been, as well as the usage and implementations of it globally, It can be described as one. Naturally, a few arguments would say it isn't one especially since it dropped just recently because of the panic, but if we were to take into account its changes from the very start, wouldn't you say that it's developed quite finely? Countries all around the globe have pretty much developed a system to account for cryptocurrencies. Wouldn't you say that it used the 10 years of the randomness it has experienced to develop? Also the argument of it not being one by just looking at the COVID 19 effect and the bubble effect, it contradicts the notion that "there is no absolute antifragility" since the argument itself is looking for one. It's kind of how even Superman has a weakness right? So wouldn't judging the development of BTC based on a few factors instead of the entire scene kind of wrong?

R


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April 10, 2020, 11:17:00 AM
 #36

No doubt crypto has became much more useful on every catastrophic situation locally or globally. The price is mostly decided by the market and on such situation, people would try to have as much cash in hand as possible to tackle the situation. The price decrease is not due to the nature of bitcoin. There's only one thing that could make bitcoin fragile and that is internet. The total dependence of bitcoin blockchain on the current internet may make it fragile when there are say a number of internet to choose from.



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April 10, 2020, 11:26:09 AM
 #37

What I can relate to the feature of Bitcoin antifragile, is that I have seen more demand for the purchase of Bitcoin. Usually, I exchange a certain amount of Bitcoin to Fiat for my grocery purchases and bill payments.
Precisely in this last week, I created an order to sell Bitcoin on the Cryptoway platform and immediately sold it at a higher market price.
There is more interest in buying Bitcoin when people realize all of its benefits it will be the best time for Bitcoin.

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April 10, 2020, 03:03:50 PM
Last edit: April 10, 2020, 05:45:26 PM by deisik
 #38

It's been a long time since I read Taleb's Antifragile, although the book is still sitting within my eyesight now up there on my bookshelf.  It looks like we do not disagree re BTC and gold being antifragile to the mainstream financial system

Gold has long been considered a last-ditch asset, so to speak, an investment of last resort, even though it hasn't been tested in this role for ages (read, it remains to be seen whether it can actually live up to these expectations nowadays). But it was BitMEX's insolent market manipulation and how quickly Bitcoin rebounded that made me think of it as an instance of antifragility revealing itself

My explanation is simple, though I'm not sure if it can be equally applied to the Mt.Gox failure. Some people probably lost millions due to the abrupt price crash (just in case, I've witnessed the whole process with my own eyes), but whichever way or angle you look at it, it was not Bitcoin's fault. It is as it has always been, while its utility is determined from within (read, it is a thing in and unto itself)

And this is what distinguishes it from, and contrasts with, stocks and the stock market

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April 19, 2020, 11:51:41 AM
 #39

This may be true, but since it happens consistently yearly for insecurity, it won't happen as they say. Nevertheless, the beneficial thing about it is that at any moment its expense decreases, it usually recovers. It never recovered at the expense of bitcoin's backdrop, it was constantly republished. At least not in the form of various currencies that have no guarantee that they will return. Among the epidemics is a great fortress of Bitcoin, its cost has not gone below a thousand dollars. May be
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April 19, 2020, 02:00:00 PM
Last edit: April 19, 2020, 09:27:59 PM by deisik
Merited by vapourminer (2)
 #40

Bitcoin and the rest of the crypto are not antifragile because the crypto market can be shifted either way sometimes just by the spread of a news

That's exactly how antifragility is supposed to come about and set in

Volatility is required for antifragility to kick in as it makes Bitcoin more robust and resilient with time. If it were rock solid, anything that would crash it would probably kill it as well. The irony is that, with more volatility Bitcoin becomes less susceptible to its negative effects as it kinda gets used to it. These effects simply wear themselves out

Some people leave, no doubt about that, but those who remain make Bitcoin stronger overall through both the sheer number, or rather ratio, of stronger hands remaining and the hands themselves becoming stronger in the process (let's call it a double antifragile impact)

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