edwinbear said:Alright. I guess all these nation states, public companies, asset managers and other high net wortheres acquiring bitcoin are just idiots. YOU are the smart one. You know better.dimitrig said:edwinbear said:Bitcoin is not "crypto". I fully agree that "crypto" for the most part are scams. Bitcoin is different. Nobody highly educated about bitcoin thinks what you said.dimitrig said:edwinbear said:sycasey said:What exactly prevents someone from just making more bitcoin?bear2034 said:sycasey said:
I guess my hesitation about bitcoin is: what's behind it? If you hold stock in a company, there is something behind that, a business that does things. If it's currency, there's a country behind that. Gold is an actual physical thing. What backs bitcoin?
Bitcoin is digital but it takes a tremendous amount of energy (and time) to mine it just like gold. Mining bitcoin involves solving math problems that take large amounts of computing power. The supply of bitcoin is also finite (21 million coins) unlike gold where you can always mine for more and unlike fiat currency where governments can always print more. What drives bitcoin's price is demand for the asset as the global money supply increases and purchasing power decreases.
The laws of physics, which is why bitcoin is the only credibly finite/scarce thing in the world. And NOTHING prevents the US government from making more dollars, which is the real problem, because historically governments only ever abuse this privilege.
There is nothing scarce about cryptocurrency.
Bitcoin hard to come by? How about etherium? Don't like either of those two? Create a new one! Or buy a NFT!
Bitcoin is a cryptocurrency like every other one. It has no intrinsic value. Anyone who thinks differently has just consumed the Kool Aid.
No.
All of these "players" that you speak of are just trying to make money and then get out before the music stops and the "bubble" pops.
Some, are simply involved because its just another asset class to be a market-maker in ... and they believe they can make a lot of money off of retail order flow.
Just because various institutions are "involved" doesnt necessarily mean that they endorse it, embrace it, or are "married" to it. For most, it's just another trading vehicle.
Any student of history of the financial markets is aware of this.
"Cults don't end well. They really don't."