Home Forums Chat Forum How do you decide which crypto currency to buy?

  • This topic has 1,276 replies, 179 voices, and was last updated 1 day ago by HobNob.
Viewing 40 posts - 321 through 360 (of 1,277 total)
  • How do you decide which crypto currency to buy?
  • davros
    Full Member

    So he’s both manipulating the market but also playing games with things he doesn’t understand. So which is it? I’m going to guess he has a better understanding of these things than most people. But good luck to trying to prove he manipulated a largely unregulated market. Is it ok when he helps the price go up but bad when he makes it go down?

    cheekymonkey888
    Free Member

    hopefully it will get to a point when people stop listening to him

    mrlebowski
    Free Member

    BTC is an ‘asset’ that’s absolutely perfect for manipulating.

    That the price goes up & down like a hookers draws when the navy is in town should be all the proof you need..

    shinton
    Free Member

    @andytherocketeer
    Have you got a link to the channel you find useful? Thanks in advance.

    FuzzyWuzzy
    Full Member

    I see Doge is mooning again, it’s days like these I wish I had more than $100 invested (just for the memes), although a couple of days ago I was glad I didn’t :p

    footflaps
    Full Member

    Is it ok when he helps the price go up but bad when he makes it go down?

    This!

    You’re buying an asset with zero intrinsic value whose price varies massively on the words of one man – you really don’t have a leg to stand on complaining about it.

    the-muffin-man
    Full Member

    The volatility is the fun of it! 🙂

    sirromj
    Full Member

    Not claiming expertise or anything, just posing the question, but isn’t the value of all money entirely abstract anyway? Can’t really criticise crypto for that.

    Value of gold is due to it’s scarcity. You know why bitcoin mining is so bad for the environment – because it’s very computationally intensive. Why is that? Because of the scarcity of the solution. Clue is in the name for the process – mining.

    Next you’ll be saying we should all go back to 26″ MTBs.

    stumpy01
    Full Member

    sirromj

    Next you’ll be saying we should all go back to 26″ MTBs

    Go Back?!
    Some of us never left!! 😉

    Rio
    Full Member

    but isn’t the value of all money entirely abstract anyway?

    No, and even if it was, you can’t assume the it works the other way round – just because something’s abstract doesn’t give it value.

    Value of gold is due to it’s scarcity.

    Not really, and again you can’t just assume the converse – something being scarce doesn’t give it value. I have on my desk the worlds only Hebtroco beer mat with a squiggly line where I tested a biro. It’s scarce, it’s worth sod all.

    chevychase
    Full Member

    Yes. Value is abstract.

    footflaps
    Full Member

    but isn’t the value of all money entirely abstract anyway?

    No.

    The pound is backed by the Bank of England who are tasked with maintaining it’s value / stability. All shops in the UK have to take it in exchange for good by law etc. It’s value varies but not by much. Eg I’d be quite happy to sell my house and have the £800k sat in a bank account as £ knowing that when I come to buy another it will still be worth the same. With crypto in a matter of days it could be worth twice that, half that or absolutely nothing.

    sillysilly
    Free Member

    Also the Bank of England doesn’t tell the world to buy £, then stop accepting it and trash it within the space of a few months…

    If you are genuinely pro crypto as a sector there are much better ways of handling it. Too many people in the space right now that are worse than the banks / governments / reserves they are apparently trying to fix.

    I find it sad as I’m actually pro crypto. Just anti sh*tcpoin and general douchebaggery that comes with the space.
    I don’t understand people b*tching about Visa / Mastercard interchange but are fine with Eth gas fees that are in excess without providing any of the value. E.g rogue retailer simply not sending you bike on payment etc… sure it will all solve itself out in a few year once the jokers are weeded out…

    andrewh
    Free Member

     I’d be quite happy to sell my house and have the £800k sat in a bank account as £ knowing that when I come to buy another it will still be worth the same. With crypto in a matter of days it could be worth twice that, half that or absolutely nothing.

    Is that just a question of timescales though? Crypto can double/halve overnight, fiat currencies usually take years to do that but can, and do, do it.

    the-muffin-man
    Full Member

    That’s about a fiver – it was probably worth x500 times that once… 🤣🤣

    bearnecessities
    Full Member

    Well this is fun 😃

    stumpy01
    Full Member

    Ha ha!

    Sorry, it was inevitable after I bought some 🤣

    the-muffin-man
    Full Member

    …yep – strap in tight! Turbulance ahead! 🙂

    flicker
    Free Member

    Well this is fun 😃

    Isn’t it just 😀

    I’ve said it before but this is why you set stop losses.

    Doing ok so far, managed to increase my holdings after the initial loss before my stops triggered. Buy the dip early morning then sell the bounce and repeat.

    flicker
    Free Member

    Oof! Now that was a dip to buy, came back up like it was on elastic 😀

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    Is that just a question of timescales though? Crypto can double/halve overnight, fiat currencies usually take years to do that but can, and do, do it.

    Yes, but in general those currencies that do go through hyperinfaltion, fail.

    And you know it’s happening, and it’ll keep happening at a predictable rate arround 2%. And you can then put any large amounts you have in a low risk savings account where it should just keep pace with inflation over the long term.

    You can say the pound has shifted against the euro and dollar, but it’s shifted less in 50 years than crypto currencies do in days/weeks.

    richardkennerley
    Full Member

    Kraken and coinbase are both failing me at the moment. Was going to gamble a bit more on the dip, but it won’t let me!

    the-muffin-man
    Full Member

    Yep – it’s Kraken under the strain! 🤣

    …I’ll get me 🧥

    fooman
    Full Member

    You’ve either missed out or dodged a bullet, depending on what happens in the next 30 minutes

    stumpy01
    Full Member

    Kraken is still dead to the world….trying to get on for the last hour or so & while the pricing page seems to be updating, there is no chance of getting into my account.

    torsoinalake
    Free Member

    Kraken is still dead to the world

    Bank run

    doris5000
    Free Member

    sirromj
    Full Member

    Not invested much so may as well leave it alone, will be interesting to see where we are at the end of the month.

    footflaps
    Full Member

    I see China is now clamping down on Crypto properly, not a minute too soon as most BC is mined there powered by coal. Hopefully they’ll outlaw mining and not just using it.

    doris5000
    Free Member

    A lot of red flags for Crypto this week.

    China, as mentioned
    Rumours that the US might clamp down on businesses paying ransomware payments in crypto (which lets face it is one of the few proven use cases so far)
    Tether was due to present its accounts to the NYAG by today

    definite ‘bubble bursting’ vibes at the moment…

    Earl
    Free Member

    Balls – we haven’t seen this prices since Feb 2021

    sillysilly
    Free Member

    I think they call it a dead cat bounce but let’s see.

    I’m willing to give a services like Coinbase the benefit of the doubt. Likely hitting both technical scale and financial margin requirements they can’t handle rather than anything unscrupulous. They make their money on spread after all and in theory volatility should be good for them.

    Hopefully this will clear out the trash, bad players, scamsters, sh&tcoins and over complicated services pretending to be useful / smart.

    chrisyork
    Full Member

    Elon musk’s influence is only fun too when he’s saying the right things, he’s far too influential over it, but he’s only echoing what everyone’s thinking I suppose. Well my profit I had had halved and I’m now at the point where I’m tempted to sell a load and keep some back, I assume if there will be a mean rise now it’ll be a slow one over time…

    shinton
    Free Member

    Hopefully this will clear out the trash, bad players, scamsters, sh&tcoins and over complicated services pretending to be useful / smart.

    And this is where I struggle. I’m a steady Eddie investor mainly investing in funds and trusts and the odd company that I research before investing in e.g. I’m currently looking for opportunities in Cyber Security companies.

    I have tried to get my head around Crypto and planned to put a toe in the water with a small investment but for the reasons quoted above I can’t see the logic.

    davros
    Full Member

    You think some volatility might remove ‘bad players’ from the world of crypto? It’s always been hugely volatile so why would they go elsewhere at this point? When there is more money to me made than ever due to increased publicity etc. So long as it is deregulated, it will remain the wild west of assets.

    doris5000
    Free Member

    Crypto is still basically gambling, it’s still a long way from being usable by a normal human, and yes it’s FULL of bad actors and scammers. Throw in the environmental issues, the fact that one of its main use cases is dark web and ransomware dodginess, and some of the key players being extremely shady indeed, it has moral issues as an investment, like defence and fossil fuels, which may or may not be an issue for you.

    Even if you DO give Coinbase the benefit of the doubt, it’s very intriguing that while crypto was crashing yesterday, ALL of the main exchanges went offline simultaneously, leaving many people unable to cash out while they were still in green.

    If you’re a steady eddie investor I probably wouldn’t go much further than putting £200 into something like $ADA, and checking back in 2 years time.

    the-muffin-man
    Full Member

    As has been said many times on this thread – Crypto is gambling – only chuck in what you can afford to lose.

    It’s not the place for long-term investments with your life’s savings.

    lamp
    Free Member

    @Doris5000 – the tide is turning on the environmental problems with BTC with more and more miners turning to renewables and using things like hydros to power the mines. ETHv2 and beyond is promising to have an absolutely tiny to zero carbon footprint and others will have to follow.

    It’s too late now, but that flash dip was the time to go shopping. The Crypto world has been here before and i’m not fazed by this dip whatsoever. The space is growing and growing, the technology is improving on almost a monthly basis. There are some great DeFi projects happening along with spurs that help the sector to become safer and more secure.

    It’s still an exciting time and there’s still opportunity for everyone to make some money out of it, but do your research! You can’t just chuck in £300 and expect things to go 500x. Keep it steady and spend some time learning what offers what…

    footflaps
    Full Member

    You think some volatility might remove ‘bad players’ from the world of crypto?

    Surely that’s 99.99% of people buying it? If it behaved like a fiat currency, ie very stable price decreasing in value by say 2% per annum (inflation), who would buy it?

    Rio
    Full Member

    there’s still opportunity for everyone to make some money out of it

    Yes but… really, no. There’s still time for some people to make money out of it, but there’s no way everyone can throw £10 in the pot and expect to get £20 out later given that there’s no value creation in the system. If it looks like a ponzi scheme and smells like a ponzi scheme then it probably is a ponzi scheme. You may be one of the lucky ones that gets £20 out (or more likely £10 after fees) but let’s not pretend that that’s not at the expense of those who will lose money.

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