Because it seems like an obvious bubble, with little / no real value?
Bitcoin was / is a pretty cool technological innovation. But the main use-case seems to be buying illegal things or laundering money, and vast majority of transactions are just speculators.
Also, the fact that it is difficult to short is further evidence of a bubble.
2) Even if this whole thing does collapse, never short something like Bitcoin unless you have unlimited cash to support such a short. Even if you're right, can you continue to sustain your short if the peak is $100,000 a coin before the collapse? (And the new bottom is $10,000, still higher than right now)
If the price goes there, can you afford the short?
>* Traders will devise a suitable risk management plan prior to initiating a short position. Unlike the media driven nonsense about a large activist shorting a bull market permanently, many traders can and do make leveraged long and short trades all the time, with the intention of exiting at a loss if the trade doesn’t go immediately (for some definition of immediately) in their favor. *
In my experience working at prop firm that was trading (speculating) on futures, this is the case. We would enter leveraged short/long positions based on some kind of signals with some kind of risk framework for all assets in the portfolio.
Good luck with that. I mean no disrespect, but I'm guessing you don't have much experience in this sort of thing if you're asking how to short bitcoin and claiming you've predicted the top of the market when it's been steadily climbing for 7+ years. It doesn't matter what reasoning you've come up with, markets are rarely driven by reason. As a wise man once said, the market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent.
If you want to make money, buy BTC. You might win and you might lose, but your odds are far better than if you try to short something that has made a 1000% gain in the last 12 months.
No, not really. It makes it useful for criminals, and a small number of people who might have good reasons to buy things, but that doesn't mean it should have a market cap of billions.
I'm not saying there are no good uses for bitcoin, of course. For example, if someone used bitcoin to import prescription drugs from Canada to the U.S, that's great. But it doesn't justify a $100B+ market cap, and as it stands, the hard part of doing that is importing the drugs, not exporting the money.
Similarly, just because Tor is useful mostly to criminals and a few human-rights advocates or privacy enthusiasts, I don't expect the Tor Browser to ever gain a major market share.
Ok, so you have no clue about this market and are making investment decisions based off your gut intuition and wild guesses. I’m sure you can find someone willing to sign the other side of that contract. Just don’t hurt yourself or gamble more than you can afford to lose.
Bitcoin was / is a pretty cool technological innovation. But the main use-case seems to be buying illegal things or laundering money, and vast majority of transactions are just speculators.
Also, the fact that it is difficult to short is further evidence of a bubble.