OK, I'm lost now (or maybe you are)
.
A single bitcoin through 1000 wallets over a single hour is still 1 bitcoin hour.
this contradicts quote below?
I think it's really the amount of time between a bitcoin is sold as a market buy
this contradicts quote above?
(someone is waiting with bitcoins on the market, someone else has need to buy regardless of price) and when it's put back up as a market sell (someone is waiting with a buy, and someone else has the need to sell regardless of price).
Known as a "Market Order" aka buy/sell, someone just buying/selling at whatever price exists in the order book.
Of course for every buy there is a sell, but a sell that's bought in to raises the price, and vice versa.
some sells raise the price, and some buys lower the price.
I dont see how that's possible, all market buy/sell orders will always be matched down the order book unless the exchange has a bug.
Market order sells will always lower price, buys will always increase price.
Sorry, thinking out loud a bit here. I think the theory is sound... and I think it's useful at least theoretically. Just for qualifying infrastructure with regards to it's effect on bitcoin's price.
No worries, I am always on the lookout for new/novel indicators to incorporate into my software as I evolve it (see siggy).
But if your "bitcoin hour" can not be derived mathematically from market metrics then it has no merit in my application, that's not to say your theory does not have general merit.