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by tom_mellior 3151 days ago
> Do you think Bitcoin is money?

Let's say yes.

> Then the right price is simple: The amount of goods you can buy for 1 hour of labour should be equal between USD and BTC. If you can buy an apple pie for $5USD, then you should be able to buy a pie with $5USD in BTC.

OK. So how exactly do we compute the "right" price for Bitcoin from this? I struggle to do this simple math.

1 comments

You're selling an apple pie for your own currency piecoin. If I to buy a pie from you I have to buy x piecoins first to match your price whatever it is. My need of a piecoin is defined by the need of our settlement for a pie ('right' price). Usually, pie like yours costs $5 so I have no incentive to pay more for your pie. If your price for a pie is x piecoins then I will buy x piecoins for $5 and 1 piecoin will cost me x/5.

'Wrong' part of a price is about modelling other people need for piecoins which in turn is about modelling need for pies and other people speculation and that's can be incredibly complex. As you can easily see 'wrong' part of a price makes your coin shitty currency.

None of this answers my question for how exactly to do the parent's math for Bitcoin, which the parent claimed was simple. None of this even talks about Bitcoin, which was specifically what I asked about.