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-   -   The Bitcoin Craze/ Fad/ Real Thing?? (https://www.thevettebarn.com/forums/showthread.php?t=125076)

Jeff '79 02-20-2021 9:37am

The Bitcoin Craze/ Fad/ Real Thing??
 
Well, I finally had to jump on the ship Friday by buying MSTR, a Bitcoin stock, that Will has mentioned in past threads, and at the behest of others in the know.
It seems MSTR had a secondary offering, therefore, diluting and driving the price temporarily down, so it was a good time to jump in.
The Bitcoin price was $56k~ when I bought MSTR at $980. I'm down a bit as the stock is at $964~ but Bitcoin went up over $57k last night so I should be just fine.
In other news, The Russell 2000, (small cap stocks) is jamming compared to NASDAQ and DOW stocks.
Moving 75% of my 401k to a Small cap fund from fully loaded Nasdaq in early January was a great move.
:ball:


DAB 02-20-2021 9:52am

Don’t understand Bitcoin.

Jeff '79 02-20-2021 9:58am

Quote:

Originally Posted by DAB (Post 1860261)
Don’t understand Bitcoin.


The world is changing, like it or not.
One can either resist and get left behind, or adapt and move into the future.
I resisted long enough, I'm moving on.:lilred:

BayouCountry 02-20-2021 10:18am

I'm in preservation mode so high risk investments like Bitcoin are off limits. I'm happy with my moderate gains in 2020 from energy stocks.

I remember talking to a young guy at a restaurant about 8 years ago. He said Bitcoin was going to make him a lot of money. He probably has more in the bank than me by now.

I always thought Bitcoin was a ponzi scheme. Maybe I thought wrong.

Jeff '79 02-20-2021 10:22am

Quote:

Originally Posted by BayouCountry (Post 1860265)
I'm in preservation mode so high risk investments like Bitcoin are off limits. I'm happy with my moderate gains in 2020 from energy stocks.

I remember talking to a young guy at a restaurant about 8 years ago. He said Bitcoin was going to make him a lot of money. He probably has more in the bank than me by now.

I always though Bitcoin was a ponzi scheme. Maybe I thought wrong.

Once you get to a certain age, preservation move is the wise move. :yesnod:

Rob 02-20-2021 10:29am

:afrocool: Tell me more about this bitcoin thing

Jeff '79 02-20-2021 10:39am

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dixievet (Post 1860267)
:afrocool: Tell me more about this bitcoin thing

You must be one of the others in the know. :D

Dan47 02-20-2021 10:46am

1 Attachment(s)
Bitcoin doesn’t make sense as an investment IMO but obviously makes sense as a speculative bet. Tulip bulbs did too for a time.

Simply another consequence of a dying fiat currency created in 1971 with the end of the Bretton Woods gold standard.

Mike Mercury 02-20-2021 10:49am

https://scontent-iad3-1.xx.fbcdn.net...d8&oe=60555A65






https://101blockchains.com/wp-conten...coins-meme.jpg













https://coincentral.com/wp-content/u.../ng:webp/ngcb3

Rob 02-20-2021 11:22am

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jeff '79 (Post 1860270)
You must be one of the others in the know. :D

#LaserEyes :dixie:

Jeff '79 02-20-2021 12:18pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dixievet (Post 1860291)
#LaserEyes :dixie:

:Jeff '79: I'd be comfortable at $60k :D

and beyond

ZipZap 02-20-2021 12:47pm

What's interesting to me, is that even when you decide to "cash out", at this point you still need to go back to the paper standard. When will BC be accepted at enough general locations to justify the value?

the new me 02-20-2021 3:46pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by ZipZap (Post 1860302)
What's interesting to me, is that even when you decide to "cash out", at this point you still need to go back to the paper standard. When will BC be accepted at enough general locations to justify the value?

TL/dr: This is too long. Don't read it.

Full text (see TL/dr warning above):
Bitcoin is relatively difficult and expensive to acquire and to spend and therefore to use for transactions. It's great for the person you're paying with bitcoin, but crappy for you. IMO unless someone is compensating you by giving you a very substantial discount for using bitcoin, just hodl (hodl -- rhymes with yodel -- is cryptocurrency-hipster-speak for "hold" and someone who hodls crypto is known as a hodler) your bitcoin and spend dollars or whatever currency you usually use.

To spend bitcoin, there are typically transaction fees from whatever bitcoin exchange you're using, (e.g. coinbase.com or gemini.com or one of the many others). These fees range from a fraction of a percent to around 2%. (You also paid a transaction fee when you acquired bitcoin, but at least that fee is considered part of your cost basis, which will be important starting in the next sentence.) In addition, the IRS demands that you track your cost basis for when you acquired the bitcoin you used for the transaction as well as the cost basis for when you spend it. If you bought $1000 worth of bitcoin when bitcoin was trading priced at $10,000 and spent $100 worth of bitcoin when it was valued at $40,000, then you made a $75 profit when you spent the bitcoin and you must report that profit. That's because you only paid $25 for the amount of bitcoin you just spent that's worth now worth $100. So to spend that $100 worth of bitcoin, let's say it costs a 1% transaction fee ($1), plus $25 in income tax on the $75 profit (more or less tax depending on your tax bracket of course). So your $100 purchase using bitcoin really costs about $130 out of pocket in this specific example.

Does that sound like a good daily-use medium of exchange to you? Now you know why people say bitcoin is for hodling, not for spending.


NB: FWIW, it seems that the IRS allows you to choose whether you're spending the first bitcoin (first-in, first-out FIFO) or a specific bitcoin you bought at a specific price in order to help you minimize income tax on the transaction. And you can pay a service to help you track your bitcoin acquisitions and spending so they can help you optimize that reporting. They also incidentally help you increase your costs of dealing with bitcoin. You can try to factor that in to your costs of spending bitcoin.

But don't get me wrong. While you probably shouldn't bet too much on bitcoin since it's a purely speculative investment with no intrinsic value, it still might be worth having some. But a man should never gamble more than he can stand to lose. (Remember, the value of stocks is hypothetically based on the long-term expectation of future earnings of the underlying company. Bitcoin has no long-term expectation of earnings because it doesn't earn anything except insofar as the price goes up. Price rise of bitcoin is based on the "greater fool" price theory in which you buy something under the proposition that some other idiot will pay more than you did for that something.)

As the saying goes, of course the game is rigged but if you don't bet you can't win. So make a point of going through the steps of opening an account on one of the exchanges. Coinbase is popular and easy to use, and you can later transition to Coinbase Pro to reduce transaction costs and give you more trading options other than market orders. But just buy $100 worth at first, just so you know that you know how to buy it. It takes a little time to set up an account with a bitcoin exchange and verify you are the legitimate holder of the bank account used to fund the bitcoin account. You'll want to be ready to go on the day you finally decide that you have to go all-in on the tulip mania.

After that there is a lot more to learn. Among those lots is that you can't really trust your bitcoin exchange. There have been some spectacular thefts from these exchanges. Read up on MT Gox, for instance. You'll want to learn about "cold wallets" where you keep your own bitcoin in your offline crypto wallet. Sort of the equivalent of keeping your money under your mattress, but the mattress is encrypted. And then hope that the blockchain itself doesn't get compromised. The blockchain is the encrypted worldwide database that keeps records of which amounts of bitcoin go with which ID/password combination for all bitcoin ever brought into existence, i.e. mined.) In theory, it's not hackable, but you probably already know the difference between theory and reality: In theory, theory and reality are the same, but in reality they're not. Oh, and here's some reality for you:

Once hailed as unhackable, blockchains are now getting hacked - MIT Technology Review
https://www.technologyreview.com/201...etting-hacked/

How Blockchain Can Be Hacked: The 51% Rule and More - Cipher.com
https://cipher.com/blog/how-blockcha...rule-and-more/

Massive Hack Exposes Bitcoin’s Greatest Weakness - Forbes
https://www.forbes.com/sites/billyba...test-weakness/

Billions were stolen in blockchain hacks last year - ZDNet
The total value of the losses from 122 attacks in 2020 would be worth $3.8 billion today.
https://www.zdnet.com/article/billio...hacks-in-2020/


While we're on the subject of bitcoin, let's look at how much electricity it takes worldwide to run all the computers that maintain the blockchain: More electricity than is used by entire small countries, and growing. Add that to the electric load of electric cars and maybe your best bet is on stocks of electricity producers.


Caveat: I am not an accountant, tax advisor, investment advisor or any other figure of authority unless "random person on the internet" is what you consider to be a figure of authority whose advice should be blindly trusted. Anything I write on an internet forum is purely for my own entertainment. If you must read this drivel, do so with such a big pinch of salt that your doctor immediately puts you on medication for high blood pressure. If you don't buy bitcoin because of what I wrote and it turns out you would have been fabulously wealthy if you hadn't listened to me say whatever it is I said, it's on you. If you do buy bitcoin because of whatever you thought you read that you thought that I wrote and find yourself penniless, crapping on the streets of San Francisco, it's on you. I am only a mirror for your own greed, fear and/or indifference.

Dan47 02-20-2021 3:50pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by ZipZap (Post 1860302)
What's interesting to me, is that even when you decide to "cash out", at this point you still need to go back to the paper standard. When will BC be accepted at enough general locations to justify the value?

That's what I see too and if it ever gets to a point where it challenges the dollar, I think the gov't will outlaw it. If it wins against the government, something better will replace it. It's too slow as a medium of exchange and clearly too volatile to be a store of value at the moment.

ZipZap 02-20-2021 3:55pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dan47 (Post 1860329)
That's what I see too and if it ever gets to a point where it challenges the dollar, I think the gov't will outlaw it. If it wins against the government, something better will replace it. It's too slow as a medium of exchange and clearly too volatile to be a store of value at the moment.

I get that I can't spend my stock shares at the grocery store, but I can almost immediately exchange the shares for currency that I can spend at the grocery store. I understand bitcoin, but I'm having a hard time seeing where the payoff will be.

the new me 02-20-2021 4:08pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by ZipZap (Post 1860330)
I get that I can't spend my stock shares at the grocery store, but I can almost immediately exchange the shares for currency that I can spend at the grocery store. I understand bitcoin, but I'm having a hard time seeing where the payoff will be.

You can exchange your crypto for currency that you can spend at the grocery stores AND you can spend your crypto directly if you so (unwisely) choose.

The payoff is similar to when you put money down on a roulette wheel and your number comes up, except in roulette you usually lose your bet immediately when the number doesn't come up. In crypto, there is more of a lasting sense of suspense.

dvarapala 02-20-2021 6:43pm

Bitcoin is a currency - you don't sell it, you spend it.

DAB 02-20-2021 7:30pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jeff '79 (Post 1860263)
What is Bitcoin? Bitcoin Explained Simply for Dummies - YouTube

The world is changing, like it or not.
One can either resist and get left behind, or adapt and move into the future.
I resisted long enough, I'm moving on.:lilred:

Over 12 minutes?

If it’s so simple, it shouldn’t take that long to explain

Rob 02-20-2021 7:37pm


Jeff '79 02-21-2021 8:43am

Quote:

Originally Posted by DAB (Post 1860371)
Over 12 minutes?

If it’s so simple, it shouldn’t take that long to explain

You prolly won't get it even after a 12 minute explanation. :D


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