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BITCOIN

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Comments

  • Sumselkb
    Sumselkb Posts: 78 Forumite
    Fourth Anniversary 10 Posts
    RichTips said:
    Sumselkb said:
    Cus said:
    If you fear it will rise to 1 BTC = £1,000,000 by 2050, then does it matter if it's £20k or £50k now?  
    At some point this investment asset class may not be the volatile element it is currently, so maybe it never goes down to £20k, but also never goes above £150k. 

    Sorry just not seeing your logic here, but to your original question, I found using coinbase for small amounts of the years (single figure £thousands) very simple, easy, and probably very cost ineffective but right up my luddite profile 🙂
     
    The logic is that if I buy it at £20k and it goes up to £1m then I will make 50x my investment. If I buy it as £50k and it goes up to £1m then I will make 20x my investment.

    As you can see, I am new to this :lol

    You may find that you're not psychologically prepared to buy Bitcoin when/if it goes back to £20k. You'd be faced with a cacophany of accusations from "experts", the media and armchair analysts that it's going to zero, it's dead, crypto is a scam etc. just like when it went from £50,000 to £13,000, and £15,000 to £2500 before that. You do you though.
    I wont have a problem buying it. I'll buy it when its cheap and sell it when its high.

    The problem is that it seems technologically complicated. I'm not very good with apps and computers and programs and it seems there's a lot things to learn/do eg software, signing up, verifying, transferring, save passwords, keep secure, exchange rates, fees, Capital Gains Tax. etc. I don't know where to start.
  • Malthusian
    Malthusian Posts: 11,055 Forumite
    Tenth Anniversary 10,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    edited 4 March 2024 at 4:10PM
    Sumselkb said:
    I am thinking of buying some Bitcoin if the price falls down low enough, say below £20,000. Around December 2022 when it was about £13k/£14k for a BTC I considered buying some Bitcoin but never got around to it.
    A simpler solution would be to bookmark the website of a gold dealer (on the assumption you want self-custody), then wait for gold to dump to £550 an ounce.

    If you're not good with apps and computers are you sure Bitcoin is your game?

    The entire point of Bitcoin is that it substitutes technological complexity for the old and busted fiat system where the ownership of an asset is determined by the rule of law. Many people who thought they had a very high level of expertise in programming have lost / forgotten their keys or lost their Bitcoin to hackers (and those losses go towards the profits cashed out). 
  • Sumselkb
    Sumselkb Posts: 78 Forumite
    Fourth Anniversary 10 Posts
    Sumselkb said:
    I am thinking of buying some Bitcoin if the price falls down low enough, say below £20,000. Around December 2022 when it was about £13k/£14k for a BTC I considered buying some Bitcoin but never got around to it.
    A simpler solution would be to bookmark the website of a gold dealer (on the assumption you want self-custody), then wait for gold to dump to £550 an ounce.

    If you're not good with apps and computers are you sure Bitcoin is your game?

    The entire point of Bitcoin is that it substitutes technological complexity for the old and busted fiat system where the ownership of an asset is determined by the rule of law. Many people who thought they had a very high level of expertise in programming have lost / forgotten their keys or lost their Bitcoin to hackers (and those losses go towards the profits cashed out). 
    I don't know yet if Bitcoin is my game or not. I'll have to read up on it.

    Thanks for the reply though.
  • silvercue
    silvercue Posts: 243 Forumite
    Sixth Anniversary 100 Posts Name Dropper
    Sumselkb said:
    RichTips said:
    Sumselkb said:
    Cus said:
    If you fear it will rise to 1 BTC = £1,000,000 by 2050, then does it matter if it's £20k or £50k now?  
    At some point this investment asset class may not be the volatile element it is currently, so maybe it never goes down to £20k, but also never goes above £150k. 

    Sorry just not seeing your logic here, but to your original question, I found using coinbase for small amounts of the years (single figure £thousands) very simple, easy, and probably very cost ineffective but right up my luddite profile 🙂
     
    The logic is that if I buy it at £20k and it goes up to £1m then I will make 50x my investment. If I buy it as £50k and it goes up to £1m then I will make 20x my investment.

    As you can see, I am new to this :lol

    You may find that you're not psychologically prepared to buy Bitcoin when/if it goes back to £20k. You'd be faced with a cacophany of accusations from "experts", the media and armchair analysts that it's going to zero, it's dead, crypto is a scam etc. just like when it went from £50,000 to £13,000, and £15,000 to £2500 before that. You do you though.
    I wont have a problem buying it. I'll buy it when its cheap and sell it when its high.

    The problem is that it seems technologically complicated. I'm not very good with apps and computers and programs and it seems there's a lot things to learn/do eg software, signing up, verifying, transferring, save passwords, keep secure, exchange rates, fees, Capital Gains Tax. etc. I don't know where to start.
    If you are not comfortable with tech there are some hurdles you will need to get passed.

    You can buy on very simple exchanges, like Crypto.com or Kraken's new basic interface.  You simply say how much you want and click a button.  I always use the exchange interfaces as you can more easily do limit orders and spread will be very tiny.

    If you want to leave your coins on the exchange, that is simple, but most don't recommend it unless you want fast access to sell.  If you move it to a wallet, then you need to understand how that works AND you simply must remember the phrases/passwords.  Lose them and lose your coins.  
  • Sumselkb
    Sumselkb Posts: 78 Forumite
    Fourth Anniversary 10 Posts
    I will have to read up on how to move it to a wallet because I wouldn't want to leave my coins on an exchange. Thanks.
  • MeteredOut
    MeteredOut Posts: 2,954 Forumite
    1,000 Posts Second Anniversary Name Dropper
    Sumselkb said:
    RichTips said:
    Sumselkb said:
    Cus said:
    If you fear it will rise to 1 BTC = £1,000,000 by 2050, then does it matter if it's £20k or £50k now?  
    At some point this investment asset class may not be the volatile element it is currently, so maybe it never goes down to £20k, but also never goes above £150k. 

    Sorry just not seeing your logic here, but to your original question, I found using coinbase for small amounts of the years (single figure £thousands) very simple, easy, and probably very cost ineffective but right up my luddite profile 🙂
     
    The logic is that if I buy it at £20k and it goes up to £1m then I will make 50x my investment. If I buy it as £50k and it goes up to £1m then I will make 20x my investment.

    As you can see, I am new to this :lol

    You may find that you're not psychologically prepared to buy Bitcoin when/if it goes back to £20k. You'd be faced with a cacophany of accusations from "experts", the media and armchair analysts that it's going to zero, it's dead, crypto is a scam etc. just like when it went from £50,000 to £13,000, and £15,000 to £2500 before that. You do you though.
    I wont have a problem buying it. I'll buy it when its cheap and sell it when its high.

    The problem is that it seems technologically complicated. I'm not very good with apps and computers and programs and it seems there's a lot things to learn/do eg software, signing up, verifying, transferring, save passwords, keep secure, exchange rates, fees, Capital Gains Tax. etc. I don't know where to start.
    Why has no-one ever thought of that before?

    Seriously, if you don’t realise why that is an incredibly ludicrous thing to say, or if you really think you’ll do that, keep your money in your bank.
  • joep2
    joep2 Posts: 29 Forumite
    Second Anniversary 10 Posts
    The FOMO is strong on this. Is it likely to pull back before or after halving?
  • Sumselkb
    Sumselkb Posts: 78 Forumite
    Fourth Anniversary 10 Posts
    Sumselkb said:
    RichTips said:
    Sumselkb said:
    Cus said:
    If you fear it will rise to 1 BTC = £1,000,000 by 2050, then does it matter if it's £20k or £50k now?  
    At some point this investment asset class may not be the volatile element it is currently, so maybe it never goes down to £20k, but also never goes above £150k. 

    Sorry just not seeing your logic here, but to your original question, I found using coinbase for small amounts of the years (single figure £thousands) very simple, easy, and probably very cost ineffective but right up my luddite profile 🙂
     
    The logic is that if I buy it at £20k and it goes up to £1m then I will make 50x my investment. If I buy it as £50k and it goes up to £1m then I will make 20x my investment.

    As you can see, I am new to this :lol

    You may find that you're not psychologically prepared to buy Bitcoin when/if it goes back to £20k. You'd be faced with a cacophany of accusations from "experts", the media and armchair analysts that it's going to zero, it's dead, crypto is a scam etc. just like when it went from £50,000 to £13,000, and £15,000 to £2500 before that. You do you though.
    I wont have a problem buying it. I'll buy it when its cheap and sell it when its high.

    The problem is that it seems technologically complicated. I'm not very good with apps and computers and programs and it seems there's a lot things to learn/do eg software, signing up, verifying, transferring, save passwords, keep secure, exchange rates, fees, Capital Gains Tax. etc. I don't know where to start.
    Why has no-one ever thought of that before?

    Seriously, if you don’t realise why that is an incredibly ludicrous thing to say, or if you really think you’ll do that, keep your money in your bank.
    I was trying to be funny but forgot to post the laughing emoticon to show I was joking :lol
  • silvercue
    silvercue Posts: 243 Forumite
    Sixth Anniversary 100 Posts Name Dropper
    edited 4 March 2024 at 9:13PM
    joep2 said:
    The FOMO is strong on this. Is it likely to pull back before or after halving?
    Who knows.  Personally, I think there may be a fair bit of sell pressure around and just passed ATH in USD, so may pull back some then, but I think that will be temporary and it will kick on again.  The Halving is generating its own FOMO! 
  • Scottex99
    Scottex99 Posts: 802 Forumite
    Ninth Anniversary 500 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    edited 5 March 2024 at 7:45AM
    joep2 said:
    The FOMO is strong on this. Is it likely to pull back before or after halving?
    Historically it’s before.

    Wouldn’t surprise me if there was a big shakeout soon.

    But we didn’t have ETFs before either. Blackrock’s accumulated $10bn in 7 weeks. What it took a Gold ETF 2 years to do 
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