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originally posted by: notsure1
originally posted by: eXia7
originally posted by: notsure1
originally posted by: eXia7
It's time to invest in real assets. You just witnessed the rise and fall of bitcoin, and now you're considering investing?
Whatever happened to tangible assets? Buy a property to rent, buy office space to rent, start your own business, for the love of god, stop giving your money away for nothing.
I am a gambler by nature.and yes I am considering a little gambling on it.
And I do invest in tangible assets but whats wrong with trying different things? its just money
It's your money. Your call. Just sharing my thoughts.
A fool and his money...
I should probably run out and buy the new I phone huh or a gaming computer?
You don't know much about market cycles do you? Now is the worst time to buy property. Prices are high and the bubble is about to burst. I'm not saying buying real assets is bad. But just like every market, it has a time to do so. Right now is not it.
originally posted by: eXia7
It's time to invest in real assets. You just witnessed the rise and fall of bitcoin, and now you're considering investing?
Whatever happened to tangible assets? Buy a property to rent, buy office space to rent, start your own business, for the love of god, stop giving your money away for nothing.
Bitcoin Options Purchased for $1 Million Will Soon Be Worthless
"The biggest-ever bet on Bitcoin options is about to expire worthless," reports Bloomberg:
Purchased for almost $1 million on LedgerX's trading platform just days after Bitcoin peaked a year ago, the call options have a strike price of $50,000 and an expiry date of Dec. 28, 2018. For the contracts to retain any value at expiry, Bitcoin would need to rally more than 1,400 percent.
Link
Economic bubbles are also similar to a Ponzi scheme in that one participant gets paid by contributions from a subsequent participant (until inevitable collapse). A bubble involves ever-rising prices in an open market (for example stock, housing, cryptocurrency,[16][17] or tulip bulbs) where prices rise because buyers bid more, and buyers bid more because prices are rising. Bubbles are often said to be based on the "greater fool" theory. As with the Ponzi scheme, the price exceeds the intrinsic value of the item,...
There's a clear difference between those though. Ponzi schemes as such generally involve a pyramid scheme, where there's chain selling, and the later buyers have to buy at a higher price in order for everyone in the pyramid to get a portion.
originally posted by: whereislogic
a reply to: notsure1
Ponzi scheme: "a form of fraud in which belief in the success of a nonexistent enterprise is fostered by the payment of quick returns to the first investors from money invested by later investors."
Definition from google. Some people are quite cunning in finding their way around the existing laws in place to counter Ponzi schemes (usually involving talk about "bubbles"). From wiki:
Economic bubbles are also similar to a Ponzi scheme in that one participant gets paid by contributions from a subsequent participant (until inevitable collapse). A bubble involves ever-rising prices in an open market (for example stock, housing, cryptocurrency,[16][17] or tulip bulbs) where prices rise because buyers bid more, and buyers bid more because prices are rising. Bubbles are often said to be based on the "greater fool" theory. As with the Ponzi scheme, the price exceeds the intrinsic value of the item,...
There's a clear difference between those though. Ponzi schemes as such generally involve a pyramid scheme, where there's chain selling, and the later buyers have to buy at a higher price in order for everyone in the pyramid to get a portion. A bubble occurs in a free trading market, where everyone is free to buy and sell the commodity at their own desire. A bubble is a normal phase in any market... As for Bitcoin, it is hard to determine its intrinsic value. It is basically determined by people's willingness to use it, and what it costs to mine it. Right now, its price is below what it costs to mine it. And since its inflation rate slowly but surely declines, its value inevitably goes up. It's the reason the Bitcoin bubble popped many times but still managed to recover again and again and again, unlike Pyramid schemes, which are dead once they collapse.