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by vmception
1945 days ago
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wow you have so many conflicting views, irrelevant comparisons between two types of markets and asset class, and don't seem to realize it? equities markets cant be compared to a commodity. so that invalidates your entire first paragraph, the longest one. as a corollary to that, don't derive your confidence from equities investors opining about commodities for the first time in their lives. you have equities investors that never traded tech and never traded commodities talking about bitcoin, you cant call that insight. bitcoin is looked at in market cap terms because it has a more transparent supply than any other commodity. this is completely new to the universe of assets and the market likes that. it removes a risk with gold, oil, etc. paragraph two and three: you want high price for a longer period of time, but are turned off by the exact and only mechanism in which it gets there - large % and large $ amount price increases. fascinating. more tech equities comparisons. mmmmk I’d like to leave you with an alternative tool for valuing, and its just scarcity. if thats not good enough for you, then just stay out of the market. retail investors en masse never got married to commodities markets for the exact reason that they are not buy and hold outside of some metals. volatility is not controversial in the commodities markets, its termed as seasonality, as supply and demand ends up having a frequency in some markets. A lot of the equites market style comparisons to bitcoin is because it started with retail (non-institutional) who never traded anything else. But don't be like them. Bitcoin’s not a company so dont use company comparisons. |
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It's not really a commodity. More of a currency.
> you want high price for a longer period of time, but are turned off by the exact and only mechanism in which it gets there - large % and large $ amount price increases. fascinating.
I'm not saying it's worth nothing. If bitcoin stays above 5k for a long time, i'm willing to say it's worth at least 5k. If it stays above 50k for a long time, i'll come around and say it's worth at least 50k.
> I’d like to leave you with an alternative tool for valuing, and its just scarcity.
Scarcity alone doesn't mean anything. I can create a cryptocurrency any time that's scarce. Doesn't make it valuable.
> Bitcoin’s not a company so dont use company comparisons.
The only commodity that it is comparable to is gold and maybe a few other precious metals that serve as value stores. And gold, for one, has held high value for thousands of years. Maybe it doesn't have intrinsic value in the way that canned beans do, but the chances of it being near worthless tomorrow are very very low since it has a 5000+ year track record. On the other hand, yes, there's seasonality and volatility in things like oil and pigs, but there are also real world use cases for those.