Fear not.
Fear not.
Someone who lies about the little things will lie about the big things too.
That's fair enough. Unless you happen to have an old Nintendo Game Boy laying around of course?
https://youtube.com/watch?v=4ckjr9x214c
I just set up my bitcoin node running Umbrel on a Raspberry Pi.
A bit of head scratching last night as I could not connect to it. I reformatted the Micro SD card this morning and reinstalled Umbrel and boom, it now works
0.58% of blockchain downloaded so far.
Will it take you less than 125 trillion years to mine 1 BTC?
Correct.
Though my next step will be setting up to support the Lightning network too and I understand that can earn transaction processing fees. It will be unlikely to cover the cost of setting up and running the node - I've done that to support the network, to have my own trusted node, and to see if this sparks any interest in my kids.
A friend did look at a mining rig last year. We worked out it was not worth the effort, cost and risk of mining here in the UK at that time.
https://news.bitcoin.com/clocking-te...-last-quarter/
From the article dated 7th December 2020 (BTC ~$20k) the profit is based on electricity price of $0.06 per kWh with a 3.7kw machine. Based on prices from that article, if it was making $10 profit per day, then it must be mining $15.24 (0.00076 BTC) worth per day (24 x $0.06 x 3.7 = $5.24 electricity costs).
In the UK with exchange rate of 1.38 USD and electricity costs £0.15 per KWh, this equated to mining worth £11.44 per day. Minus 24 x £0.15 x 3.7 = £13.32 So -£1.88 loss per day.
At $40k bitcoin, we would have mining = £22.88 per day or £9.56 profit per day
At $60k bitcoin, we would have mining = £34.32 per day or £21.00 profit per day
Even with the increase of BTC value, there is a shortage of machines so doubtful we could get one and difficulty is increasing so mining returns would diminish as well as depreciation of machinery, outages and downtime. There were easier ways to make money using that $3.9k investment. Using it to buy bitcoin then would have seen a value of $11k now.
Last edited by mangoosian; 29th March 2021 at 21:45.
Here come the big boys (I don't believe for a second they don't already hold a position btw)
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/03/31/bitc...t-clients.html
They will just earn commissions, this has nothing to do with their own investments.
There is client demand, so they facilitate it. Takes quite a bit of infrastructure investment in order to create the necessary processes, main problems being safekeeping and creating a framework for risk reporting.
And if you are curious which positions they are holding: https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/d...480167d10k.htm
Someone who lies about the little things will lie about the big things too.
Absolutely, yes.
We have all seen this picture of seemingly contradicting statements from various banks making the rounds everywhere - it's obviously crap as these statements come from different parts of these organisations at different times (and lots are not even contradictory). A bit like saying Goldman Sachs CEO commented about risk of owning equities and then a year later their research division puts out a recommendation to buy it - or even weaker - their Wealth Management is facilitating it for clients! I understand it gives the coinies satisfaction that banks are opening up their eco systems for cryptos, but that is nothing like endorsement.
Clearly, there is so much noise around bitcoin and so many clients are asking banks for access (which includes advisory in the next step), banks are not ignoring it anymore and that is a YUGE step.
Someone who lies about the little things will lie about the big things too.
BTC is really struggling around the $59/60K mark. Another rejection this morning at this level, needs a real push / good news to close above these numbers.
This seems like a risky move to me, after all the banksters managed to only narrowly avoid hanging themselves and the rest of us, last decade with just 'conventional' money, requiring unprecedented tax payer/ STATE support to save our bottoms...which ushered in the new normal of zero interest rates, crushing prudent savers.
I really hope they understand what they're getting into here and they can rein in their natural bankerly urges towards greed and short termist thinking and that the Regulators do a bang up job.
The launch next week by JP Morgan of their "Basket of Companies with Exposure to Cryptocurrency" could provide an interesting test of this hypothesis.
Essentially they are offering notes with an initial purchase price of $1,000 which will be used to buy "an unequally weighted basket consisting of 11 Reference Stocks of U.S.-listed companies that operate businesses that [JPM] believe to be, directly or indirectly, related to cryptocurrencies or other digital assets, including as a result of bitcoin holdings, cryptocurrency technology products, cryptocurrency mining products, digital payments or bitcoin trading". The actual share purchases were scheduled to be made yesterday March 31st.
The notes run for just over a year and will be redeemed in the first week of May 2022 for the amount that the shares fetch on the market at that time. (Less a 1.5% 'Basket Retention', payable to JPM.)
You can find a list of the companies, along with their weightings, in the document linked to above which is dated March 9th, 2021. As a prelude to the launch I've put together a rough and ready spreadsheet to try and get some feel for what the relative performance of the basket, measured against both bitcoin and the S&P500, would have been like between March 8th and 31st.
Increase in value 8/3/21 to 31/3/21
The performance of the individual constituents had a broad variation from +32.1% to -4.25%.
Bare Bitcoin $1111.81 JPM CryptoBasket $1094.65 (less 1.5%) S&P500 Index $1014.63
That's obviously over an extremely short time span during what may well be seen to have been a particularly turbulent patch.
It is my intention to reset all the values on the official start day (April 6th) and will probably check it sporadically thereafter. I have seen nothing further reported since the initial press releases went out and would be grateful for any pointers/links to subsequent material should anyone encounter such like.
Last edited by petethegeek; 1st April 2021 at 20:59.
The taxman cometh...
https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/court...ho-have-used-0
Someone who lies about the little things will lie about the big things too.
Still struggling to break upwards past $60k. Has been pushing on that door but finding it firmly shut for now
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We just need Elon to tweet Moodys to encourage a AAA rating for Bitcoin, then its off to the races :-)
Ah, good point Raffe, more detail here if anyone like me is interested,
https://www.investopedia.com/terms/v/volcker-rule.asp
Bitcoin flowing into watch transactions.
Sold a watch last week, buyer requested to pay via BTC and covering of the fees.
Has anyone here had HSBC whispering gently into their shell-like?
https://twitter.com/cameron/status/1380526047188369409
Are we clinging on to 60k this time? No huge swing downwards, which is encouraging!
I hope so as I finally managed to buy some. A week later, Coinbase still haven't verified my account. Etoro wanted scans of every official document I've collected throughout my life, so I went with Binance, which was very straightforward.
Only a fairly modest amount, but I thought it made sense to have some. Now I have a little etherium in my sights. I was even tempted with an art nft the other day too, not sure what's come over me, haha!
Someone who lies about the little things will lie about the big things too.
Interesting, and a view Ive seen echoed elsewhere in recent weeks.
Oh look: the dreaded puking kitty:
Someone who lies about the little things will lie about the big things too.
What happened the camel from a few pages back? Did he recover ;-)
Is all this bitcoin frenzy and excitement causing you nosebleeds and dizziness? If so this Inverse Bitcoin ETF may provide you with just the off ramp you are seeking.
Bitcoin seeing some very large leveraged account liquidations since yesterday. Watch out, this maybe the Archegos of crypto....
Someone who lies about the little things will lie about the big things too.
Genuinely curious how long until somebody pulls the plug from the biggest dogshite in finance:
Suppose arrest Elon for his relentless insider pumping at the same time, two birds with one stone.
Someone who lies about the little things will lie about the big things too.
Bought some crypto about 3 years ago during the mini boom and it all went to shit when that crashed. Decided the check my binance account yesterday and randomly found £2k of crypto in there
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