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To: Vermont Lt
As I write this, Bitcoin is having an excellent day.

Up 4.6%.

$44,100.

Every trade is jumping a couple hundred dollars, up or down.

I do not really understand it, myself.

It should make a good inflation or foreign currency hedge because of its finite quantity - just 22 million Bitcoins, as I recall.

The intensive computer calculations necessary to mine Bitcoins make no sense to me, and the Public Ledger makes no sense at all.

If you have a public trading market, you already have a Public Ledger, with millisecond calculations. If someone wants to buy or sell Bitcoins privately, so what?

Finally, if each Bitcoin had a permanent unique serial number, they would be impossible to steal, and impossible to lose.

Frankly, as it stands today, Bitcoin has significant value only to tax criminals, to money launderers, and to speculators.

5 posted on 12/20/2023 7:01:02 AM PST by zeestephen (Trump "Lost" By 43,000 Votes - Spread Across Three States - GA, WI, AZ)
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To: zeestephen

The world would be better off from money laundering, and black market crap if they recalled and replaced $100 bills. A very, very, very small part of these activities involve bitcoin. The reason you hear about them is that it fills a narrative the government and the banks want you to believe.

Jamie Dimon was bitching about bitcoin a few weeks ago. Yet, no one seems to recall his firm was fined $14 billion for manipulating the silver market. The banks do not want bitcoin because they do not own a piece of it—and its use means the loss of billions in transaction fees that will not go them.

Yet...Blackrock, Fidelity, and a whole cast of major firms want in on their ETF possibilities.

The public ledger is the technology behind this that makes it unique. It allows every transaction to be tracked, in public. Forever.

Imagine a government running on a block chain. Public auditing would happen in an instant. Want to know where the pentagon is spending money? It’s there for everyone to see. Its use in money laundering or tax evasion is humorous. I was under an adult from the IRS for almost four years because of bitcoin transactions from 2013 to 2017. Trust me...they can identify every single transaction and where it went.

In a lot of places in the world, banking is reserved for the top 10% of the population. Being able to transact on a cell phone without having to deal with the fees of the banking system will open up new markets to literally billions of unbanked folk.

And no, its not going to go away because Jamie Dimon or Warren Buffet don’t like it.

ETFs will cut down on the volatility because the derivative markets will play with it—just as they do gold and silver.

The part I DO agree with you on is the speculative nature of bitcoin. I started buying it (not investing, buying) in 2013. The whipsaw nature of the adoption cycle has been brutal. I bought my first 5 @$110 each. The Compound Annual Growth Rate is somewhere in the 70% range. But the ups and downs per 4 year cycle are easily 50% either way. That will slow down with ETF adoption.

In fact, I believe the ETF adoption is a “sell the news” opportunity. The is almost universally believed that ETF adoption will cause the price to skyrocket. Which...in my experience means it will drop 10-15% in a few days.

But, I’ve held onto it for ten years and made good returns. I take the gravy, pay the tax, and wait for the next cycle.


6 posted on 12/20/2023 8:41:31 AM PST by Vermont Lt (Don’t vote for anyone over 70 years old. Get rid of the geriatric politicians.)
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