Phiber said:It will be interesting to revisit this thread this time nextyearweek to see where things are at.
Load of Bullion said:Silver & Bitcoin rise and fall compared with the USD. I have both. Both historical charts have spikes akin to "Tulips".
Dynoman said:Load of Bullion said:Silver & Bitcoin rise and fall compared with the USD. I have both. Both historical charts have spikes akin to "Tulips".
Would someone please explain this popular market analogy to me? As far as I can tell they are both unique commodities that have offered vastly different properties for the time periods they gained popularity in. But much of what I keep hearing in regard to Bitcoins surging popularity is as according to Peter Schiff, "Tulip mania all over again!"
Help me understand the similarities and/or differences between a perishable flower and an internet cryptocurrency?
mmissinglink said:Those who spend hundreds of dollars on a BitCoin and then lose their shirt when the music stops playing, I have no sympathy for you.
Load of Bullion said:mmissinglink said:Those who spend hundreds of dollars on a BitCoin and then lose their shirt when the music stops playing, I have no sympathy for you.
Plenty of people have purchased silver when it was in the 30's & 40's. They have lost a considerable percentage of purchasing power and perhaps feel sorry for buying silver when it was in an apparent bubble.
Credit Crunch said:Currently USD $526. Was as high as $900 about 24 hours ago. Could be sitting on a 42% loss in less than a day if you bought into the hype.
It's two very different things. Of course it's true that silver/gold can fall significantly like we have seen in 2013, but physical gold and silver can't disappear like crypto electronic digits in a system prone to cyber hacking and corruption. Besides, who can say with certainty that some people haven't already been able to defeat the alleged failsafes on this created-out-of-thin-air scheme called BitCoin?
mmissinglink said:Load of Bullion said:mmissinglink said:Those who spend hundreds of dollars on a BitCoin and then lose their shirt when the music stops playing, I have no sympathy for you.
Plenty of people have purchased silver when it was in the 30's & 40's. They have lost a considerable percentage of purchasing power and perhaps feel sorry for buying silver when it was in an apparent bubble.
It's two very different things. Of course it's true that silver/gold can fall significantly like we have seen in 2013, but physical gold and silver can't disappear like crypto electronic digits in a system prone to cyber hacking and corruption. Besides, who can say with certainty that some people haven't already been able to defeat the alleged failsafes on this created-out-of-thin-air scheme called BitCoin?
.
:lol:wrcmad said:Nah, you don't lose unless you sell...... right?![]()
Emanance said:I've read the words of a great many experts talking about gold as the ultimate store of wealth. They will often mention the inflation a Weimer Germany as the greatest example of how gold functions in a collapsing economy with massive civil unrest. What many of them forget to mention is that gold's transportability perhaps contributed to it more worth than any other asset, for those suffering at the sharp end of the mood of the masses. Unarguably, this transportability is something that Bitcoin does even better than gold.
Emanance said:What many of them forget to mention is that gold's transportability perhaps contributed to it more worth than any other asset, for those suffering at the sharp end of the mood of the masses. Unarguably, this transportability is something that Bitcoin does even better than gold.