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gtac01 (OP)
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August 28, 2014, 04:44:03 PM
 #1

Bitcoin price is determined ONLY by supply vs. demand. Let's take a look at what that means:

1/3 of the 13.2 million coins mined are lost forever leaving around 9 million (call it the "float"), making the real market cap of BTC around $4.5 billion. BTC trades globally $20 million a day or %0.43 of that. A stock that has similar market cap is GRPN ($4.42 billion), it trades $100 million a day or 2.26% of that in the US stock market. More accurately, GRPN's volume average divided by its float (available freely traded shares) = 3.92% of shares are traded a day. Bitcoin has a daily inflation of 3600 coins or $1.8 million, which equates to about 10% of the daily volume or .04% of the 9 million available coins (this percentage gets smaller every day).

In terms of market cap, BTC is like GRPN in the NASDAQ. However, BTC has a much broader market, multiple exchanges, 24/7 trading, and it only trades 1/5th of GRPN's volume. For this reason and the way it trades, is why I believe BTC's effective "float" is much smaller than 9 million, with the vast majority in HODL mode and effectively out of the supply. This is the reason BTC has been able to sustain such a logarithmic trend. Also, whenever the HODLers dump after a rally, they are absorbed by newborn HODLers and the cycle repeats.

Effectively, BTC's available supply is tiny contrary to what most people believe due to the "$6 billion" market cap. In reality, it takes a small fraction of that to move BTC's price upward, and support is massive thanks to HODLers and wanna-be HODLers trying to accumulate. Every day that goes by and BTC fails to break ~$400 level support, the less likely it will and the higher lows that are put in place.

Lastly, difficulty has never overshot price by so much if ever and the price has never been under the average slope by so much. Along with many other indicators, after 9 months of accumulation (the longest ever) and news, BTC is in cheap territory right now. The weak hands have dumped and new HODLers have emerged as evidenced by an inability to drop below ~$450 for any significant amount of time. The effective supply of people willing to sell is shrinking every day, and I predict the next run up is within 2-3 months.







TrollinU
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August 28, 2014, 04:57:00 PM
 #2

1/3 of coins are lost forever?
source? Oh you have none...

bit tired
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August 28, 2014, 04:58:13 PM
 #3

What if Satoshi and the first miners decide to start dumping? They must collectively have a massive amount of bitcoins.
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August 28, 2014, 05:00:55 PM
 #4

What if Satoshi and the first miners decide to start dumping? They must collectively have a massive amount of bitcoins.

they won't
maker88
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August 28, 2014, 05:24:55 PM
 #5

What if Satoshi and the first miners decide to start dumping? They must collectively have a massive amount of bitcoins.

Yeah that's a reasonable scenario  Roll Eyes
bit tired
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August 28, 2014, 05:31:31 PM
Last edit: August 28, 2014, 05:57:36 PM by bit tired
 #6

What if Satoshi and the first miners decide to start dumping? They must collectively have a massive amount of bitcoins.

Yeah that's a reasonable scenario  Roll Eyes

What if they get a bit strapped for cash?
gtac01 (OP)
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August 28, 2014, 05:44:27 PM
 #7

1/3 of coins are lost forever?
source? Oh you have none...

http://onbitcoin.com/2013/12/07/bitcoin-spoilage-2-million-bitcoin-likely-lost-old-hard-drives/

It is well known that there are at least 2 million in untouched wallets with 50 btc in them and more that have never been touched etc. And you are right, they are lost forever until quantum computing is able to crack their private keys, at which point we would just switch to a new encryption.

Ibian
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August 28, 2014, 06:03:45 PM
 #8

Satoshis coins won't move until we have a working bitcoin economy - that is, until those who accept bitcoin as payment stop converting it instantly into fiat. And probably not until the bitcoin economy is mature. His coins can be effectively considered "lost" or "out of circulation" until we get there. It's a feature, not a bug.

Look inside yourself, and you will see that you are the bubble.
Wandererfromthenorth
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August 28, 2014, 07:38:16 PM
 #9

1/3 of coins are lost forever?
source? Oh you have none...

http://onbitcoin.com/2013/12/07/bitcoin-spoilage-2-million-bitcoin-likely-lost-old-hard-drives/

It is well known that there are at least 2 million in untouched wallets with 50 btc in them and more that have never been touched etc. And you are right, they are lost forever until quantum computing is able to crack their private keys, at which point we would just switch to a new encryption.


Wow, very interesting article indeed!!
Thanks for sharing!
RyNinDaCleM
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August 28, 2014, 07:50:13 PM
 #10

1/3 of coins are lost forever?
source? Oh you have none...

http://onbitcoin.com/2013/12/07/bitcoin-spoilage-2-million-bitcoin-likely-lost-old-hard-drives/

It is well known that there are at least 2 million in untouched wallets with 50 btc in them and more that have never been touched etc. And you are right, they are lost forever until quantum computing is able to crack their private keys, at which point we would just switch to a new encryption.



While I believe that there is a substantial amount of coins that are lost "forever", I also believe the actual percentage will get smaller with time. Back in the early days, people were much more careless because there was almost no value. These days, people are more careful about securing their coins because it would be a significant loss to lose even a few BTC.

And I also doubt that there are 2M BTC lost. Maybe immobile but not lost.

Wandererfromthenorth
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August 28, 2014, 07:57:22 PM
 #11

1/3 of coins are lost forever?
source? Oh you have none...

http://onbitcoin.com/2013/12/07/bitcoin-spoilage-2-million-bitcoin-likely-lost-old-hard-drives/

It is well known that there are at least 2 million in untouched wallets with 50 btc in them and more that have never been touched etc. And you are right, they are lost forever until quantum computing is able to crack their private keys, at which point we would just switch to a new encryption.



While I believe that there is a substantial amount of coins that are lost "forever", I also believe the actual percentage will get smaller with time. Back in the early days, people were much more careless because there was almost no value. These days, people are more careful about securing their coins because it would be a significant loss to lose even a few BTC.

And I also doubt that there are 2M BTC lost. Maybe immobile but not lost.
But the fact that those addresses have exactly 50 BTC each and they were never touched clearly suggests that at least a very good percentage of those 2 million BTC are actually lost (mined in the early days and forgotten)...
RyNinDaCleM
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August 28, 2014, 08:18:14 PM
 #12

1/3 of coins are lost forever?
source? Oh you have none...

http://onbitcoin.com/2013/12/07/bitcoin-spoilage-2-million-bitcoin-likely-lost-old-hard-drives/

It is well known that there are at least 2 million in untouched wallets with 50 btc in them and more that have never been touched etc. And you are right, they are lost forever until quantum computing is able to crack their private keys, at which point we would just switch to a new encryption.



While I believe that there is a substantial amount of coins that are lost "forever", I also believe the actual percentage will get smaller with time. Back in the early days, people were much more careless because there was almost no value. These days, people are more careful about securing their coins because it would be a significant loss to lose even a few BTC.

And I also doubt that there are 2M BTC lost. Maybe immobile but not lost.
But the fact that those addresses have exactly 50 BTC each and they were never touched clearly suggests that at least a very good percentage of those 2 million BTC are actually lost (mined in the early days and forgotten)...

How many people would have mined 1 block only to give up? I would have to guess that those were (at least mostly) from one miner. Though I can't explain why they would separate them into individual wallets either. I thought I read that Satoshi coins were separated that exact way, so perhaps he has control over more than 1M BTC. In which case, I'm sure they aren't lost unless they were intentionally lost.

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August 28, 2014, 08:25:24 PM
 #13

Also the number of btc "available for circulation" is a lot less than the market cap (due to lost lost wallets, hodlers, reserves, closed markets, etc...)
InwardContour
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August 28, 2014, 09:18:32 PM
 #14

Nice article about the bitcoin scenario in this period, if the charts are right howlers are going to face a great winter time.
illyiller
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August 28, 2014, 09:35:06 PM
 #15

Satoshis coins won't move until we have a working bitcoin economy - that is, until those who accept bitcoin as payment stop converting it instantly into fiat. And probably not until the bitcoin economy is mature. His coins can be effectively considered "lost" or "out of circulation" until we get there. It's a feature, not a bug.

I hate that line so much. No, a massive % of the entire supply concentrated in the hands of one actor is not a "feature". Assuming we can trust Satoshi (ironic, eh?), it is at best "not a bug". That doesn't make it a feature. There is nothing good about this at all for a supposedly (hopefully someday) decentralized economy.
bit tired
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August 28, 2014, 09:39:07 PM
 #16

Satoshis coins won't move until we have a working bitcoin economy - that is, until those who accept bitcoin as payment stop converting it instantly into fiat. And probably not until the bitcoin economy is mature. His coins can be effectively considered "lost" or "out of circulation" until we get there. It's a feature, not a bug.

I hate that line so much. No, a massive % of the entire supply concentrated in the hands of one actor is not a "feature". Assuming we can trust Satoshi (ironic, eh?), it is at best "not a bug". That doesn't make it a feature. There is nothing good about this at all for a supposedly (hopefully someday) decentralized economy.

It makes Satoshi like the Bill Gates of the Bitcoin world.
TrollinU
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August 28, 2014, 10:08:52 PM
 #17

Satoshis coins won't move until we have a working bitcoin economy - that is, until those who accept bitcoin as payment stop converting it instantly into fiat. And probably not until the bitcoin economy is mature. His coins can be effectively considered "lost" or "out of circulation" until we get there. It's a feature, not a bug.

I hate that line so much. No, a massive % of the entire supply concentrated in the hands of one actor is not a "feature". Assuming we can trust Satoshi (ironic, eh?), it is at best "not a bug". That doesn't make it a feature. There is nothing good about this at all for a supposedly (hopefully someday) decentralized economy.

It makes Satoshi like the Bill Gates of the Bitcoin world.


Except Bill Gates spending every last Dollar he owns still won't cause the value of the USD to plummet.

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August 28, 2014, 10:10:59 PM
 #18

Well, you made a nice argument with reasonable assumptions and comparisons. I don't firmly agree or disagree with anything you said, but it was nice to see someone engaging in a rational discussion in this sub. Unlike all the replies you got. Haha. What a shit hole this place is now.

Edit:
Perhaps the thread title was a little over the top, though. You're asking for it with that one.
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August 28, 2014, 10:17:27 PM
 #19

Satoshis coins won't move until we have a working bitcoin economy - that is, until those who accept bitcoin as payment stop converting it instantly into fiat. And probably not until the bitcoin economy is mature. His coins can be effectively considered "lost" or "out of circulation" until we get there. It's a feature, not a bug.

I hate that line so much. No, a massive % of the entire supply concentrated in the hands of one actor is not a "feature". Assuming we can trust Satoshi (ironic, eh?), it is at best "not a bug". That doesn't make it a feature. There is nothing good about this at all for a supposedly (hopefully someday) decentralized economy.

I fantasize that Satoshi will release these coins in a democratic way (sms? mike hearn's passport thingy? facebook?)  when the time is right, thus giving the dollar a death kiss
penii plural 4 penis
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August 28, 2014, 10:47:07 PM
 #20

What if Satoshi and the first miners decide to start dumping? They must collectively have a massive amount of bitcoins.

Yeah that's a reasonable scenario  Roll Eyes

What if they get a bit strapped for cash?

You're assuming these coins haven't been lost.

High likelihood they have been.
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