Tuesday, August 24, 2021

Bitcoin is up, but don't be fooled by the current FOMO, it will be down again in the future.

It's funny how fast things can go in the Bitcoin world.

Just a few weeks ago, the price of Bitcoin was just above $30K. Everyone was betting on a return to the $20K mark.

Bitcoin has since rebounded sharply back above $50K for the first time since May 14, 2021, and the crash that followed China's ban announcement.

Now everyone is in FOMO mode. Everyone is talking about one thing: $100K for Bitcoin by the end of the year.

While I have no doubt that Bitcoin will eventually see its price reach $100K, there are lessons to be learned from the past. Among the big lessons is that Bitcoin's volatility is part of the game.

Bitcoin is currently on the rise, but its price will fall sharply again in the future sooner or later. Bitcoin's evolution is made up of ups and downs.

This is natural, as Bitcoin is a free market where its users are constantly able to determine the equilibrium price.

De facto, its price fluctuates wildly depending on the events and emotions of investors. So you should be prepared to see the price of Bitcoin fall again, then bounce back again, and so on.

It is in your best interest to take a long-term view to control your emotions so that you do not experience this volatility. If you make this your greatest ally, you will be able to take full advantage of this revolution.

This was just a reminder as the Fear & Greed Index now stands at 79 which means extreme greed in the market.

Be careful and build your game for the long term.


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Monday, August 23, 2021

Improve your vision, don't bet on luck.

When the big pie (BTC) returned to the price below 50,000, all kinds of voices in pursuit of the copycats emerged again. Of course, you can carefully select among a large number of altcoins to find the potential coins which may increase greater than Bitcoin, or you can see many of them surging to sky in a specific period of time (usually at the end of the bull market cycle when the btc price is rather stable). Flurry of copycats chased the rise of Bitcoin one after another. This is not surprising.

Just as the words of US President Lincoln said: You can lie to one person at all times, or you can lie to everyone at the same time, but you cannot lie to everyone at all times.

This is the problem with the bull market. The bull market is full of bubbles. This bubble is a good wine for long-term investors who cross the bulls and bears, but it is poisonous for the new-comers that are blindly following the wind.

If you want to know the poison in the poison, they are the altcoins in the bull market. (Note: Altcoins refer to all virtual currencies other than Bitcoin)

Poisoned wine is sweet; drinking poison may not make you die, but will make the pain endless. Those people who drink poisoned wine will look at the btc holder and swear words like "rigid", "dogmatic" or "coward".

Some people are either blindly ignorant or arrogant --- they invest in a bunch of altcoins, and they can't count them with ten fingers. But they don't have strong confidence in any of them, and each one only cost one thousand or eight hundred yuan. They think that even if the price goes to zero today, it doesn't hurt.

It's not an investment as it is a gambling on luck. They are trying their luck that they can run into a virtual currency which gives them 100x profit.

These friends just aren't good in mathematics, or they simply don't bother to use their brains. Invest in 100 rubbish coins, 1000 yuan cost each, the total investment is 100,000 yuan. Suppose you are lucky enough to hit a 100x coin, and you really hold it, and you manage to escape at the top. Finally, you get 100 times profit on this coin, but all the others are zero, and the total amount is also 100,000 yuan.

If you invested 100,000 yuan and have 100,000 yuan after all these, you missed better and more profitable opportunities, and also spent a lot of energy and time to deal with the purchase, sale, safekeeping and other issues, for hundreds of coins. On the whole, it was not just a waste of time, but a huge loss in potential profits.

If the winning odds are high, then the money you can win must be small. High odds and low profit rate are gambling. Professional players never gamble. Look at the Wall Street, how many of them make money by betting on luck? They only do the most sure thing. They use tools to hedge risks and increase winning probabilities. They effectively manage market risks and turn volatility into their profitable friend.

Maybe a friend is dissatisfied: Can't I be lucky? If I invest one coin, I win one hundred times from that coin, can't I?

What I want to say is, my friend, if your luck in life is really super good, you would have been prosperous and reached financial freedom. Why do you want to mess around with the virtual currences, and spend a lot of time in order to invest one thousand and eight hundred bucks into a rubbish coin?

You are still a poor man. The fact that God is desperately hinting to you is that you are really not lucky.

That being the case, why do you still hold self-confidence in your luck?

This is not self-confidence, but narcissism, arrogance, and conceit.

Attributing success to luck is also a kind of historical nihilism. Just as some well-known big players like to promote that China's rising is based on the luck of a few so-called historical events, they are essentially promoting a wrong view of history and the world.

To strike on iron, you must be tough by yourself. The real master has always relied on strength.

If you rely on real strength, no matter if it is good luck or bad luck, it can be turned into good luck and achieve good results that are beneficial to you.

Throw away your illusions, spend more time on your practice, and work harder to improve your investment ability!

https://preview.redd.it/939ex7k2u8j71.png?width=1280&format=png&auto=webp&s=669e0ed14990dee82bcd26aa444b9c2b1c2a6c73

--- Translated from http://losercointalk.org/thread?topicId=1195


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7 biggest Bitcoin myths according to Coinbase

Debunking Bitcoin Myths

With Bitcoin hitting new all-time highs and major news breaking almost every day, it seemed like a good time to look at some of the biggest myths and misconceptions people tend to have about the world’s first cryptocurrency, see if they have any merit, and correct the record. If you think, for instance, that Bitcoin’s value is “based on nothing” or that it’s too volatile to have any real-world use, this guide is for you. We’re separating fact from fiction — without shying away from legitimate risks — to get to the truth about the world’s most popular cryptocurrency.

Myth #1: Bitcoin is a bubble

While it’s true that some people buy Bitcoin as a speculative investment seeking big returns, that doesn’t mean that Bitcoin itself is a bubble. Bubbles are economic cycles characterized by unsustainable rises in market value. They eventually pop when investors realize prices are much higher than an asset’s fundamental value. Bitcoin is occasionally compared to an infamous early speculative bubble: the 17th century Dutch “tulip mania.” In 1637, speculators caused prices for some tulip varieties to surge 26-fold. The bubble lasted six months, crashed, and never recovered.

The real story:

Bitcoin has gone through multiple price cycles over the course of over 12 years — and has recovered each time to achieve new highs. As with any new technology, boom and bust cycles are expected. For example, at the end of the dot.com era in the nineties, Amazon stock nosedived from around $100 to just $5, only to become one of the most valuable companies in the world in the subsequent decades.

Some major Bitcoin investors believe that Bitcoin’s oscillations form a pattern typical of young markets. Bitcoin, they say, will surge and recede with smaller swings and longer durations between them until at some point in the future it settles into relative stability. But only time will tell.

Myth #2: Bitcoin has no real-world uses

Critics like to claim that Bitcoin isn’t useful in the real world — or if it does have a use, it’s mostly useful for illicit activity. Neither of those statements are true. Bitcoin has a long history as a means of making payments to anyone in the world, all without a bank or payment processor in the middle. And it is increasingly being used as a gold-like hedge against inflation by major institutional investors.

The real story:

In recent years, Bitcoin has become increasingly popular as an inflation-resistant store of value much like gold — leading to Bitcoin’s “digital gold” nickname. A growing number of major funds and publicly traded companies (Tesla, Square, MicroStrategy) have bought millions or even billions of dollars worth of Bitcoin as a means to better manage their assets.

Much like gold, Bitcoin is scarce (there will never be more than 21 million Bitcoin). Gold, of course, is heavy, bulky, and difficult to transport and store. Bitcoin, on the other hand, can be sent digitally as easily as sending an email.

Bitcoin received negative attention in early years as a means of payment on the dark web. But when the first big dark-web market was shuttered, Bitcoin prices went up after just a few days — and continued to rise.

Like any form of money, some of it will be misused. But compared to US dollars, illicit use of Bitcoin is a drop in the bucket. According to a recent report, 2.1% of Bitcoin transaction volume in 2019 was related to criminal enterprise.

And because all Bitcoin transactions happen on an open blockchain, it’s often easier for authorities to track illicit activity than it would be in the traditional financial system.

Myth #3: Bitcoin doesn’t have real value

While Bitcoin might not be backed by a physical asset like gold, neither is the US dollar or virtually any other modern fiat currency. Bitcoin is hard-coded to be scarce, which helps make it resistant to inflation. Inflation with fiat currencies can occur when large quantities are created, thus diluting the existing supply .

The real story:

There will only ever be 21 million bitcoin. This scarcity is a major driver of its value.

Not only is the supply capped, but the amount of new Bitcoin being mined is declining over time in a predictable way. Every four years, in an event called a “halving,” block rewards paid to miners in the network are cut in half.

This helps ensure that the supply is always reducing which, by the basic economic principle of scarcity, has worked to keep the price of Bitcoin broadly trending upwards over the long-term — from less than a penny at the start to more than $50,000 as of mid-February, 2021. (See Bitcoin’s current price.)

Bitcoin also derives value from the work the computers on the network contribute via a process called mining. Powerful computers all over the world supply a vast amount of processing power towards the work of validating and securing every transaction (in exchange they’re rewarded with new Bitcoin).

Myth #4: Bitcoin will just be replaced by a competitor

Bitcoin was the first really successful digital money. And while new cryptocurrencies have long promised to overtake Bitcoin via new features or other advantages, none have come close.

The real story:

Though thousands of rival cryptocurrencies have been created over the past decade, Bitcoin has always been and remains the most valuable cryptocurrency by market cap by a significant margin.

It’s also the most popular, making up around 60% of the crypto market.

Reasons include Bitcoin’s “first-mover” advantage, along with the purity of its mission as a decentralized and open currency.

Which isn’t to say that competitors aren’t welcome to try. Bitcoin is decentralized, meaning it’s operated by a global community of miners and nodes, instead of a central authority.

For example, if Bitcoin’s underlying architecture has to change in order to add new functionality, features, or to protect against a newly-discovered bug, the community can initiate a fork to upgrade the network.

In order for the upgrade to be accepted, a 51% majority of the community must support the change. This allows Bitcoin to adapt and evolve as required, as seen with Bitcoin’s Segregated Witness (“SegWit”) upgrade in 2017.

Because the software is open-source, developers who aren’t able to gain community consensus can even create a hard-fork of the Bitcoin blockchain and make an entirely new cryptocurrency. For instance, Bitcoin Cash was created this way — but so far no Bitcoin clones have come anywhere close to replacing the original.

Of course, a huge amount of innovation is happening in the space, so it’s conceivable that a bigger rival could emerge. But given current circumstances most experts don’t think Bitcoin being replaced anytime soon is a likely outcome.

Myth #5: Investing in Bitcoin is gambling

While it’s true that Bitcoin has experienced significant price volatility over the last decade, that’s to be expected of a young and growing market. Since Bitcoin’s genesis block in 2010, it has steadily gained long-term value — with a market cap exceeding $1 trillion (as of February 2021; see the current market cap). And as Bitcoin has continued to mature, a robust regulatory structure in countries around the world has helped to attract a wave of institutional investment (Tesla, hedge funds).

The whole story:

There is a fundamental rationale for a Bitcoin investor to believe that the value of their holdings should rise — whereas in a casino you know the odds are tilted in favor of the house. Of course there is no guarantee about future performance or continued results, but Bitcoin’s long term trendline over the last decade has been upward.

One popular investing strategy for reducing the impact of volatility is dollar-cost averaging — in which you invest a fixed amount every week or month no matter what the market is doing. This strategy typically results in positive returns regardless of volatility in a positive trendline environment.

Bitcoin volatility appears to be on the decline. A recent Bloomberg analysis compared Bitcoin’s recent bull run to the 2017 boom — and found that volatility is considerably lower this time around. Why? The rise of institutional participants and the general stabilizing effect of crypto “going mainstream.”

Whether Bitcoin or any other cryptocurrency has a place in your investment portfolio depends on your personal circumstances, risk tolerance, and investment time horizon. And even though Bitcoin has trended steadily upwards in over the past decade, it also has had substantial down cycles. Investors should be careful navigating volatile markets (and consider working with a financial advisor before making major investments).

Myth #6: Bitcoin isn’t secure

The Bitcoin network has never been hacked. Its open-source code has been scrutinized by countless security experts and computer scientists.Bitcoin was also the first digital currency to solve the double-spend problem, making “trustless” peer-to-peer currencies a reality. Further, All Bitcoin transactions are irreversible.

The real story:

Many misconceptions around the security of Bitcoin stem from attacks on third-party businesses and services that make use of Bitcoin, and not the Bitcoin network itself. High-profile hacks of early Bitcoin companies with flawed security procedures (like the one that hit the early Japan-based exchange Mt. Gox) and occasional data breaches (like the one that impacted users of the wallet provider Ledger) have made some users question the security of Bitcoin.

Bitcoin’s core protocol has functioned securely with 99.9% uptime since its creation in 2009.

A vast amount of computing power secures the network. And the miners that power the network are distributed throughout the world, with nodes in 100 countries — which means there are no single points of failure.

Myth #7: Bitcoin is bad for the environment

Bitcoin mining is an energy-intensive process. But determining the environmental impact is hard. For one thing, all aspects of the digital economy require energy. Consider the entire global banking system, and all of the energy required to process bank transactions and power office buildings, ATMs, local branches, and much more.

The real story:

Recent research by New York-based fund Ark Investment Management concludes that “Bitcoin is much more efficient than traditional banking and gold mining on a global scale.”

A significant portion of Bitcoin mining is powered by renewable-energy sources (including wind, hydro, and solar). The actual number ranges from 20 percent to more than 70 percent, according to Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index.

The Cambridge researchers concluded: “Bitcoin’s environmental footprint currently remains marginal at best.”

An argument can even be made that the economic incentives inherent to Bitcoin mining are helping drive sustainable energy innovation, as miners constantly seek to increase profits by lowering their electricity costs — in a world where renewable energy is fast becoming the cheapest option.


No one is saying our first-world countries are in hyperinflation today. What we are saying is that we're dangerously increasing in our first world countries’ rates of inflation, to points where we can very easily grow into hyperinflation rates in our first world countries in the next 30 years

That is the worry. We're seeing the inflation train speed up, and in 30 years this steadily growing inflation rate can very easily become hyperinflation. The poor will not know to hedge themselves away from their Countries' fiat currencies like the US Dollar. So if we do nothing to warn them, then they will all be left in their fiat currencies savings to suffer in its devaluation.

So yes, speak to people responsibly about Bitcoin and crypto if you know how to. Don't tell anyone to throw in their life savings, just tell them to stop buying lotto tickets every week and instead use that money to buy a little bit of crypto every week. Because if they don't, then sure, you'll be protected. But they will be fucked and they will look at you with the cryptographic money to blame. So if you want to help the poor, then help them onboard by redirecting to Bitcoin & good cryptocurrencies every little amount of money they already throw away into lottery tickets today and other none essential expenditures. A little money will still go a long way in this space in a 30 year time chart.

A bit of context with some video context within it to help people understand better: https://investla.medium.com/the-modern-financial-system-is-a-debt-based-pyramid-scheme-and-an-investment-based-ponzi-scheme-e37c4154b9

Saying that hyperinflation in first-world countries is impossible is exactly the kind of baseless dollar-shilling economists all over the world have been warning about.

One of those people who foresaw this was Satoshi themselves. They wrote about it extensively in their white paper when talking about the inflation happening from the second bank bailout they saw in 2008, and how the bailouts that would happen following that new precedent would cause even further increases in our first world countries’ rates of inflation when offering Bitcoin as a potential solution to that inflation.

Nobody is saying it will happen, they're saying it has a strong potential to happen with everything we're seeing in the increasing rates of inflation today, when calculated with all the data spanning back to 1971 when Nixon's ban on the gold trade for the dollar gave us the fiat currency standard we've all been suffering through for the last 50 years.

The inflation rate has not slowed down since then and has only increased if you've learned how to read past the US government's twisted CPI numbers that are manipulated every year to keep a fake low inflation rate number. If you calculate in things they purposefully leave out like housing, travel, and food, then the real inflation rates are more obviously seen. Like the fact that housing inflates on an average of 26% per year against fiat currencies like the dollar after it became no longer tied to gold.

Yes, maybe something happens and they change the way the system works so we don't continue to head down this path, but that change hasn't happened in the last 50 years. So people should not be betting that something will happen, so their dollars can be saved from their current increasing rates of inflation. They should be hedged in some way in case this approaching event happens and is not prevented.

Check out [WTFHAPPENEDIN1971.com](WTFHAPPENEDIN1971.com) if you want to see more data on all these increasing rates of inflation we have all lived through for the last 50 years.


History favours the bold

When El Salvador announced they were wanting to make Bitcoin legal tender and break the chains of using the US dollar during that 3 month bear period, I couldn’t help but think if Bitcoin was to crash lower their people and country could be losing a ton of money and their young president would be the only one to blame.

El Salvador isn’t exactly a wealthy country and this move, if went the other way, could have been horrible for its people who don’t have a hell of a lot to begin with, with the possibility of pushing the whole country down into poverty with everyone losing a ton of money. But as my title suggests history favours the bold, and by god it was a bold move to switch to Bitcoin.

The size of their presidents balls making a speculative digital currency legal tender and being the first in the world, without any mass scale testing, to do so quite frankly shocked me to make such a big call with what could have been at stake and what could have been if markets crashed.

However, As we’ve had such a drastic pull up in the markets and now looking at new all time highs for BTC, the opposite has happened and this gamble has hugely paid off and I hope for their sake it continues! Think about all those small coffee shops and other retailers we saw in El Salvador accepting Bitcoin during the bear cycle, they will be seeing huge profit gains now. Their profits from the last 3 months would have doubled and these small family run places will be starting to get somewhere with their new found wealth - and we, the small community of crypto, are all to thank. And we all win from this.

I hope El Salvador becomes very prosperous, they deserve it after all for making such a huge leap of faith into the unknown. It’ll probably go down as the biggest event in their modern history bring them into a first world nation. And I hope other countries beaten down financially see this and break the chains of fiat and follow suit.

I know BTC won’t fix world poverty, but it will fix one world currency - and this definitely can help towards fixing poverty. This is why smaller countries need to see what El Salvador has done, what it means, and follow. It means that someone in a 3rd world country can work and earn a currency that has the same value in a first world country, and the ability to save up and break out becomes that much more achievable. I doubt we will see a world wide minimum wage from it, but it’s a step closer to financial freedom for the down trodden who are going to benefit most from it.

Everyone deserves an equal playing field, and I think BTC offers this far more than most people realise