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by phaed
3239 days ago
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People look at price history of Bitcoin, see the hockey stick, and immediately call bubble. http://imgur.com/a/ifk2b What they fail to realize is that these linear charts plot a $5 change the same distance when Bitcoin is $10 as when Bitcoin is $4000. Yet for Bitcoin to go up to $15 when it was $10 it had to increase in market cap by 50%. For bitcoin to go up from $4000 to $4005 it doesn't need jack squat, it's a rounding error. A better view of Bitcoin's price is in log scale. Here you can see that the growth is steady: http://i.imgur.com/R9yQ8Dk.png There is nothing special happening now, as there was nothing special when it went from $5->$10, $50->$100, $100->$200, $500->$1000, $1000->$2000. People just want them, and they are a finite resource. |
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Realistically, Bitcoin is less than 10 years old and bubbles have lasted 10+ years before.
The real estate bubble, for instance, started around 1997 and didn't really complete its popping until 2012. That was 15 years and 10 of which people were 100% oblivious to it.
I'm not saying its nesc. the case in this instance but your "evidence" is no different than what people tried to argue to justify housing prices and such in the past.
Even with your log graph, there is a substantial disconnect from the trend line you drew vs. prices.