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BITCOIN
Comments
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Why has no-one ever thought of that before?Sumselkb said:
I wont have a problem buying it. I'll buy it when its cheap and sell it when its high.RichTips said:Sumselkb said:
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.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 🙂
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.
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.
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.1 -
The FOMO is strong on this. Is it likely to pull back before or after halving?0
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I was trying to be funny but forgot to post the laughing emoticon to show I was joking :lolMeteredOut said:
Why has no-one ever thought of that before?Sumselkb said:
I wont have a problem buying it. I'll buy it when its cheap and sell it when its high.RichTips said:Sumselkb said:
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.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 🙂
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.
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.
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.0 -
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!joep2 said:The FOMO is strong on this. Is it likely to pull back before or after halving?1 -
Historically it’s before.joep2 said:The FOMO is strong on this. Is it likely to pull back before or after halving?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 do3 -
This gave me a right chuckle! So true.MeteredOut said:
Why has no-one ever thought of that before?Sumselkb said:
I wont have a problem buying it. I'll buy it when its cheap and sell it when its high.RichTips said:Sumselkb said:
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.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 🙂
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.
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.
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.
"Wealth consists not in having great possessions, but in having few wants."1 -
Oh and get some child to help you with the techy bits, good luck!originator said:
Yeah I get it,I am old and am pretty sure they thought I was being coerced into buying bitcoin , the amount of hoops they made me jump through did my head in!To me it's a bit of fun, bit like betting on the horses lol. Just go for it......Sumselkb said:
I wont have a problem buying it. I'll buy it when its cheap and sell it when its high.RichTips said:Sumselkb said:
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.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 🙂
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.
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.mortgage free 3/10/12:)0 -
Scottex99 said:
Historically it’s before.joep2 said:The FOMO is strong on this. Is it likely to pull back before or after halving?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
The involvement of Blackrock etc and creation of ETFs seems to have temporarily silenced the "OMG it's a ponzi" types on here, and as someone that holds due to inertia I welcome them hoovering up much of the supply.
Proud member of the wokerati, though I don't eat tofu.Home is where my books are.Solar PV 5.2kWp system, SE facing, >1% shading, installed March 2019.Mortgage free July 20230 -
I'd be curious to learn if/how the throughts and opinions of @Malthusian have evolved, especially as he responded to my first comment on the subject way back in mid-2020 and is still active.onomatopoeia99 said:Scottex99 said:
Historically it’s before.joep2 said:The FOMO is strong on this. Is it likely to pull back before or after halving?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
The involvement of Blackrock etc and creation of ETFs seems to have temporarily silenced the "OMG it's a ponzi" types on here, and as someone that holds due to inertia I welcome them hoovering up much of the supply.
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I think we hit ATH……
Probably a zillion sell orders at 69,420 lol1
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