Home Precious Metals
Options

Congratulations to gold - New all time highs! $5600+!!!

15152545657

Comments

  • Options
    taxmadtaxmad Posts: 1,186 ✭✭✭✭

    @stevek said:

    There may be a little bit of value in it for use as kindling. LOL

  • Options
    blitzdudeblitzdude Posts: 7,620 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Added some BTC and ETH this morning, Thank you for the gift. RGDS!

    The whole worlds off its rocker, buy Gold™.
    BOOMIN!™
    Wooooha! Did someone just say it's officially "TACO™" Tuesday????
    Retiring at 55, what day is today? :sunglasses:

  • Options
    stevekstevek Posts: 32,298 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Today I've been glancing at the live Bitcoin chart, maybe around once an hour. It's frightening to watch, and I don't even own any. 😐

  • Options
    RobMRobM Posts: 609 ✭✭✭

    Don't be surprised when BTC gets a Gov bailout. If not for BTC itself, it would eventually occur for stable coins due to treasuries exposure.

  • Options
    coastaljerseyguycoastaljerseyguy Posts: 2,066 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @blitzdude said:
    Added some BTC and ETH this morning, Thank you for the gift. RGDS!

    Keep averaging down.

  • Options
    blitzdudeblitzdude Posts: 7,620 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @coastaljerseyguy said:

    @blitzdude said:
    Added some BTC and ETH this morning, Thank you for the gift. RGDS!

    Keep averaging down.

    Up, down, sideways, it doesn't matter. Add it every payday just like clockwork. Again, thanks for the gift. RGDS!

    The whole worlds off its rocker, buy Gold™.
    BOOMIN!™
    Wooooha! Did someone just say it's officially "TACO™" Tuesday????
    Retiring at 55, what day is today? :sunglasses:

  • Options
    coastaljerseyguycoastaljerseyguy Posts: 2,066 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited November 21, 2025 11:02AM

    Not for me, put 20% of my pay into 401k Vanguard ETFs. Too old to worry about risk or some 4 year cycle like some post mentioned.

  • Options
    blitzdudeblitzdude Posts: 7,620 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @coastaljerseyguy said:
    Not for me, put 20% of my pay into 401k Vanguard ETFs. Too old to worry about risk or some 4 year cycle like some post mentioned.

    Max out the 401k and IRAs also plus the additional 50+ contributions. Still have disposable income that needs to be parked somewhere. Crypto has been good for that. THKS!

    The whole worlds off its rocker, buy Gold™.
    BOOMIN!™
    Wooooha! Did someone just say it's officially "TACO™" Tuesday????
    Retiring at 55, what day is today? :sunglasses:

  • Options
    coastaljerseyguycoastaljerseyguy Posts: 2,066 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @blitzdude said:

    @coastaljerseyguy said:
    Not for me, put 20% of my pay into 401k Vanguard ETFs. Too old to worry about risk or some 4 year cycle like some post mentioned.

    Max out the 401k and IRAs also plus the additional 50+ contributions. Still have disposable income that needs to be parked somewhere. Crypto has been good for that. THKS!

    My wife takes care of the rest of my disposable income. :)

  • Options
    ProofCollectionProofCollection Posts: 7,809 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @Higashiyama said:
    @ProofCollection said “No, the rate of production of bitcoin cannot be accelerated. If I wasn't clear above, the bitcoin software adjusts production so that it will always”

    Thanks for this correction. It’s a fascinating point, AI should impact the cost of mining and likely the number of mining operations, but will have negligible impact on the aggregate rate of mining.

    It remains plausible to believe that the long term value of bitcoin will trend to zero. I find it hard to believe that bitcoin has long term value as a means of exchange, store of value, etc. Bitcoin and the bitcoin community may prove to be quite resilient, but …

    Long term can be a very long time. Hard to say what the world will look like in 50 or 100 years. Will people care about PMs in 50 or 100 or 200 years? The world needs something like Bitcoin though, it's just impossible to predict if there will be something better to come along or not. I presume everyone in this discussion is American and I find that most of us tend to think about Bitcoin with a myopic US-only perspective. We've had the luxury of a currency with a fair amount of stability that is the world's reserve currency (for now). When you understand that the rest of the world doesn't have this luxury and doesn't want to rely on the US dollar and access to the SWIFT system the value of an independent digital currency accepted worldwide becomes pretty apparent.

  • Options
    dcarrdcarr Posts: 10,054 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited November 21, 2025 8:40PM

    Precious metals have been money for 5,000+ years. Will they still be valued 50 years from now ? Probably (in my opinion).

    Bitcoin has been around for, what, 15 years ? Will it still be a thing 15 years from now ? I put the odds at 50-50, although I have nothing really to base that on. And that is the problem - there is no historical track record for crypto-currency in general.

    My outlook for Bitcoin is for there to be significant challenges.

    • It is very energy-intensive. Does society really need it ? It seems that it is not really a very efficient medium of exchange.

    • Will Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC) take over ? I could see this happening as there are ways for governments to implement monetary policy and acquire revenues via CBDC.

    • The Achilles-Heel word has already been mentioned in this thread: "Software". Who controls and writes the software ? The Bitcoin "community". But wherever there is software, there can be hidden manipulation and hidden agendas.

    • As I understand it, the act of "mining" Bitcoin is the mechanism by which Bitcoin transactions are verified. The mining is where all the energy consumption originates. As time goes by, the subsidy for mining is halved at regular time intervals. At some point, there will be no more subsidy for mining and the reward from mining will come entirely from transaction fees. These fees can spike at times of peak demand for urgent transactions. I don't think anyone really knows how Bitcoin will function if everyone rushes for the exits at the same time, and the fees for these urgent transactions spike so high that it becomes impossible to trade. And if the Bitcoin value were to drop precipitously, that would greatly diminish the incentive to do the mining (because the mining reward, in real terms, could become insufficient to make it worthwhile).

    So I could see Bitcoin go on for some years.
    Or it could implode in spectacular fashion.

    .

  • Options
    HeubschgoldHeubschgold Posts: 311 ✭✭✭

    Very plausible and good perspective on the inevitable " fees" tagged on.

  • Options
    ProofCollectionProofCollection Posts: 7,809 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited November 21, 2025 11:17PM

    @dcarr said:
    Precious metals have been money for 5,000+ years. Will they still be valued 50 years from now ? Probably (in my opinion).

    Yes, hard to argue with that track record. But in the past few decades the world has gone digital. And again, technology could make it feasible to create precious metals artificially or space mining could make the metals no longer precious. Fortune telling it tough.

    Bitcoin has been around for, what, 15 years ? Will it still be a thing 15 years from now ? I put the odds at 50-50, although I have nothing really to base that on. And that is the problem - there is no historical track record for crypto-currency in general.

    I get it. But the US and other nations are establishing Bitcoin reserves and the future is undeniably digital. It's easy to see the direction things are headed. The future may not be Bitcoin, but things are headed that direction.

    My outlook for Bitcoin is for there to be significant challenges.

    • It is very energy-intensive. Does society really need it ? It seems that it is not really a very efficient medium of exchange.

    It probably won't be used as a medium of exchange. That's why BTC is referred to as digital gold which isn't really a medium of exchange either.
    Does society need it? The success of Bitcoin would indicate that the answer is yes.

    • Will Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC) take over ? I could see this happening as there are ways for governments to implement monetary policy and acquire revenues via CBDC.

    The future is digital. To expect CBs not to adopt new technology is silly. It's not if, it's when. Perhaps not all of them, but at least a few and I think some already have.

    • The Achilles-Heel word has already been mentioned in this thread: "Software". Who controls and writes the software ? The Bitcoin "community". But wherever there is software, there can be hidden manipulation and hidden agendas.

    Nothing is hidden with Bitcoin. The code is public. The only way to change it is to get the majority of the network to run the new code. Not only is that infeasible to convince the majority of the network to adopt "bad" software improvements, but should someone manage to do that in a hostile manner, a portion of the network would run the old code and then the world could decide whether to use the New Bitcoin or the Old Bitcoin. So really the global market would decide what succeeds.

    • As I understand it, the act of "mining" Bitcoin is the mechanism by which Bitcoin transactions are verified. The mining is where all the energy consumption originates. As time goes by, the subsidy for mining is halved at regular time intervals. At some point, there will be no more subsidy for mining and the reward from mining will come entirely from transaction fees. These fees can spike at times of peak demand for urgent transactions. I don't think anyone really knows how Bitcoin will function if everyone rushes for the exits at the same time, and the fees for these urgent transactions spike so high that it becomes impossible to trade. And if the Bitcoin value were to drop precipitously, that would greatly diminish the incentive to do the mining (because the mining reward, in real terms, could become insufficient to make it worthwhile).

    We actually do know how it functions when it becomes overloaded. That's happened before. As you note fees spike and it becomes difficult to use. Improvements have made this less likely to happen. Bitcoin is not intended for high volume transactions. Other crypto will likely fill this role.
    The mining reward system is brilliant in its conception. All of the scenarios you've mentioned have happened before. When the price goes down and mining profit margins wane, mining power goes down. When mining power goes down, the algo adjusts to make mining easier to maintain the same production rate. The opposite happens when mining profit margins surge. It's not unlike gold really. With high gold prices more mines become feasible and ramp up production. As a result we will see higher gold production which absent other factors would lead to dropping gold prices and the less profitable mines shutting down again.

    So I could see Bitcoin go on for some years.
    Or it could implode in spectacular fashion.

    Those certainly are the two possibilities.

  • Options
    RedneckHBRedneckHB Posts: 20,161 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Created by technology, destroyed by technology.

    Excuses are tools of the ignorant

    Knowledge is the enemy of fear

  • Options
    softparadesoftparade Posts: 9,973 ✭✭✭✭✭

    When the power goes out your ability to access, manage, or transact with your Bitcoin goes poof.

    yeah no thx

    COPPER is gutter !

  • Options
    blitzdudeblitzdude Posts: 7,620 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @softparade said:
    When the power goes out your ability to access, manage, or transact with your Bitcoin goes poof.

    yeah no thx

    Yeah cuz that happens so frequently. :roll THKS!

    The whole worlds off its rocker, buy Gold™.
    BOOMIN!™
    Wooooha! Did someone just say it's officially "TACO™" Tuesday????
    Retiring at 55, what day is today? :sunglasses:

  • Options
    softparadesoftparade Posts: 9,973 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @blitzdude said:

    @softparade said:
    When the power goes out your ability to access, manage, or transact with your Bitcoin goes poof.

    yeah no thx

    Yeah cuz that happens so frequently. :roll THKS!

    It happens every single day. Step out of your bubble.

    COPPER is gutter !

  • Options
    blitzdudeblitzdude Posts: 7,620 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @softparade said:

    @blitzdude said:

    @softparade said:
    When the power goes out your ability to access, manage, or transact with your Bitcoin goes poof.

    yeah no thx

    Yeah cuz that happens so frequently. :roll THKS!

    It happens every single day. Step out of your bubble.

    Get a Generac. RGDS!

    The whole worlds off its rocker, buy Gold™.
    BOOMIN!™
    Wooooha! Did someone just say it's officially "TACO™" Tuesday????
    Retiring at 55, what day is today? :sunglasses:

  • Options
    softparadesoftparade Posts: 9,973 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited November 22, 2025 12:24PM

    @blitzdude said:

    @softparade said:

    @blitzdude said:

    @softparade said:
    When the power goes out your ability to access, manage, or transact with your Bitcoin goes poof.

    yeah no thx

    Yeah cuz that happens so frequently. :roll THKS!

    It happens every single day. Step out of your bubble.

    Get a Generac. RGDS!

    Actually, I have one. So blessed aren’t we?

    COPPER is gutter !

  • Options
    ProofCollectionProofCollection Posts: 7,809 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @softparade said:
    When the power goes out your ability to access, manage, or transact with your Bitcoin goes poof.

    yeah no thx

    Yes if you only have a desktop PC and don't have a laptop or phone. The more critical aspect is the Internet.

  • Options
    taxmadtaxmad Posts: 1,186 ✭✭✭✭

    @ProofCollection said:

    @softparade said:
    When the power goes out your ability to access, manage, or transact with your Bitcoin goes poof.

    yeah no thx

    Yes if you only have a desktop PC and don't have a laptop or phone. The more critical aspect is the Internet.

    The most critical aspect is relying on someone to verify the blockchain...

  • Options
    GoldFinger1969GoldFinger1969 Posts: 3,410 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Maybe someone can explain to me why these Bitcoin miners get paid in BTC for doing some complex mathematical equations or something like that. I never understood the logic or rationale.

    I mean, if the owner or creator of all the Bitcoins needed to figure out these mathematical equations or needed to know what Pi to the Trillionth decimal space was, yeah, you get paid for doing work and he gives you a BTC in exchange.

    But best I can tell they just do some complicated computations and then get BTC for it. :o

  • Options
    ProofCollectionProofCollection Posts: 7,809 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @GoldFinger1969 said:
    Maybe someone can explain to me why these Bitcoin miners get paid in BTC for doing some complex mathematical equations or something like that. I never understood the logic or rationale.

    I mean, if the owner or creator of all the Bitcoins needed to figure out these mathematical equations or needed to know what Pi to the Trillionth decimal space was, yeah, you get paid for doing work and he gives you a BTC in exchange.

    But best I can tell they just do some complicated computations and then get BTC for it. :o

    This will explain it: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proof_of_work

  • Options
    dcarrdcarr Posts: 10,054 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @ProofCollection said:

    @dcarr said:
    Precious metals have been money for 5,000+ years. Will they still be valued 50 years from now ? Probably (in my opinion).

    Yes, hard to argue with that track record. But in the past few decades the world has gone digital. And again, technology could make it feasible to create precious metals artificially or space mining could make the metals no longer precious. Fortune telling it tough.

    Bitcoin has been around for, what, 15 years ? Will it still be a thing 15 years from now ? I put the odds at 50-50, although I have nothing really to base that on. And that is the problem - there is no historical track record for crypto-currency in general.

    I get it. But the US and other nations are establishing Bitcoin reserves and the future is undeniably digital. It's easy to see the direction things are headed. The future may not be Bitcoin, but things are headed that direction.

    My outlook for Bitcoin is for there to be significant challenges.

    • It is very energy-intensive. Does society really need it ? It seems that it is not really a very efficient medium of exchange.

    It probably won't be used as a medium of exchange. That's why BTC is referred to as digital gold which isn't really a medium of exchange either.
    Does society need it? The success of Bitcoin would indicate that the answer is yes.

    • Will Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC) take over ? I could see this happening as there are ways for governments to implement monetary policy and acquire revenues via CBDC.

    The future is digital. To expect CBs not to adopt new technology is silly. It's not if, it's when. Perhaps not all of them, but at least a few and I think some already have.

    • The Achilles-Heel word has already been mentioned in this thread: "Software". Who controls and writes the software ? The Bitcoin "community". But wherever there is software, there can be hidden manipulation and hidden agendas.

    Nothing is hidden with Bitcoin. The code is public. The only way to change it is to get the majority of the network to run the new code. Not only is that infeasible to convince the majority of the network to adopt "bad" software improvements, but should someone manage to do that in a hostile manner, a portion of the network would run the old code and then the world could decide whether to use the New Bitcoin or the Old Bitcoin. So really the global market would decide what succeeds.

    • As I understand it, the act of "mining" Bitcoin is the mechanism by which Bitcoin transactions are verified. The mining is where all the energy consumption originates. As time goes by, the subsidy for mining is halved at regular time intervals. At some point, there will be no more subsidy for mining and the reward from mining will come entirely from transaction fees. These fees can spike at times of peak demand for urgent transactions. I don't think anyone really knows how Bitcoin will function if everyone rushes for the exits at the same time, and the fees for these urgent transactions spike so high that it becomes impossible to trade. And if the Bitcoin value were to drop precipitously, that would greatly diminish the incentive to do the mining (because the mining reward, in real terms, could become insufficient to make it worthwhile).

    We actually do know how it functions when it becomes overloaded. That's happened before. As you note fees spike and it becomes difficult to use. Improvements have made this less likely to happen. Bitcoin is not intended for high volume transactions. Other crypto will likely fill this role.
    The mining reward system is brilliant in its conception. All of the scenarios you've mentioned have happened before. When the price goes down and mining profit margins wane, mining power goes down. When mining power goes down, the algo adjusts to make mining easier to maintain the same production rate. The opposite happens when mining profit margins surge. It's not unlike gold really. With high gold prices more mines become feasible and ramp up production. As a result we will see higher gold production which absent other factors would lead to dropping gold prices and the less profitable mines shutting down again.

    So I could see Bitcoin go on for some years.
    Or it could implode in spectacular fashion.

    Those certainly are the two possibilities.

    .

    Manufacturing precious metals would require expensive and messy nuclear reactions. Mining asteroids would also be extremely expensive for humans. If robots can do the entire missions themselves, that might make it somewhat economical, eventually.

    Digital currencies will be developed further for wider use. I don't think that necessarily bodes well for Bitcoin, however. What happens when Bitcoin is no longer the prominent "crypto-currency" ?

    If Bitcoin is not used as a medium of exchange, then by definition, it is not a crypto "currency". Bitcoin was originally envisioned as a currency for exchange and not as an "asset". This illustrates that it is hard to predict how things play out. And a complex system like Bitcoin can behave strangely and unexpectedly when severely stressed.

    The variability in the difficulty of mining Bitcoin seems like it makes it much more inefficient in terms of energy usage. I know the reasoning for it is to keep Bitcoin going. But to make mining more difficult and expensive, when there are more mining resources doing it, seems very inefficient.

    I used to write software for a living. I worked with a guy who often amazed people with how fast he could write an algorithm. His algorithms usually worked quite well - until an unexpected input occurred and then the algorithm would blow up. I suspect that the Bitcoin algorithms haven't been fully stress-tested yet for fringe inputs.

    .

  • Options
    blitzdudeblitzdude Posts: 7,620 ✭✭✭✭✭

    BTC is and will remain the gold standard. The Crypto of Kings so to speak. It should no doubt be a part of every portfolio. Stay away from the gutter coins, the doge, dogfart, shiba etc. and you'll be fine. RGDS!

    The whole worlds off its rocker, buy Gold™.
    BOOMIN!™
    Wooooha! Did someone just say it's officially "TACO™" Tuesday????
    Retiring at 55, what day is today? :sunglasses:

  • Options
    taxmadtaxmad Posts: 1,186 ✭✭✭✭

    @dcarr said:

    I used to write software for a living. I worked with a guy who often amazed people with how fast he could write an algorithm. His algorithms usually worked quite well - until an unexpected input occurred and then the algorithm would blow up. I suspect that the Bitcoin algorithms haven't been fully stress-tested yet for fringe inputs.

    There was a segment on CNBC last week discussing the threat of Quantum Computing to the Bitcoin algorithms. I admit I don't understand algorithms, but it seems to be a static infrastructure in a very dynamic industry

    https://www.thestreet.com/crypto/technology/major-secruity-firm-warns-quantum-computing-could-break-bitcoin

  • Options
    RedneckHBRedneckHB Posts: 20,161 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @taxmad said:

    @dcarr said:

    I used to write software for a living. I worked with a guy who often amazed people with how fast he could write an algorithm. His algorithms usually worked quite well - until an unexpected input occurred and then the algorithm would blow up. I suspect that the Bitcoin algorithms haven't been fully stress-tested yet for fringe inputs.

    I admit I don't understand algorithms

    They were invented by AL Gore.

    Excuses are tools of the ignorant

    Knowledge is the enemy of fear

  • Options
    dcarrdcarr Posts: 10,054 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @blitzdude said:
    [Bitcoin] should no doubt be a part of every portfolio.

    .

    Bitcoin might be suitable for some gambling/speculating accounts.
    It is a speculation, not an investment for a "portfolio".

    .

  • Options
    ProofCollectionProofCollection Posts: 7,809 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @dcarr said:

    @ProofCollection said:

    @dcarr said:
    Precious metals have been money for 5,000+ years. Will they still be valued 50 years from now ? Probably (in my opinion).

    Yes, hard to argue with that track record. But in the past few decades the world has gone digital. And again, technology could make it feasible to create precious metals artificially or space mining could make the metals no longer precious. Fortune telling it tough.

    Bitcoin has been around for, what, 15 years ? Will it still be a thing 15 years from now ? I put the odds at 50-50, although I have nothing really to base that on. And that is the problem - there is no historical track record for crypto-currency in general.

    I get it. But the US and other nations are establishing Bitcoin reserves and the future is undeniably digital. It's easy to see the direction things are headed. The future may not be Bitcoin, but things are headed that direction.

    My outlook for Bitcoin is for there to be significant challenges.

    • It is very energy-intensive. Does society really need it ? It seems that it is not really a very efficient medium of exchange.

    It probably won't be used as a medium of exchange. That's why BTC is referred to as digital gold which isn't really a medium of exchange either.
    Does society need it? The success of Bitcoin would indicate that the answer is yes.

    • Will Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC) take over ? I could see this happening as there are ways for governments to implement monetary policy and acquire revenues via CBDC.

    The future is digital. To expect CBs not to adopt new technology is silly. It's not if, it's when. Perhaps not all of them, but at least a few and I think some already have.

    • The Achilles-Heel word has already been mentioned in this thread: "Software". Who controls and writes the software ? The Bitcoin "community". But wherever there is software, there can be hidden manipulation and hidden agendas.

    Nothing is hidden with Bitcoin. The code is public. The only way to change it is to get the majority of the network to run the new code. Not only is that infeasible to convince the majority of the network to adopt "bad" software improvements, but should someone manage to do that in a hostile manner, a portion of the network would run the old code and then the world could decide whether to use the New Bitcoin or the Old Bitcoin. So really the global market would decide what succeeds.

    • As I understand it, the act of "mining" Bitcoin is the mechanism by which Bitcoin transactions are verified. The mining is where all the energy consumption originates. As time goes by, the subsidy for mining is halved at regular time intervals. At some point, there will be no more subsidy for mining and the reward from mining will come entirely from transaction fees. These fees can spike at times of peak demand for urgent transactions. I don't think anyone really knows how Bitcoin will function if everyone rushes for the exits at the same time, and the fees for these urgent transactions spike so high that it becomes impossible to trade. And if the Bitcoin value were to drop precipitously, that would greatly diminish the incentive to do the mining (because the mining reward, in real terms, could become insufficient to make it worthwhile).

    We actually do know how it functions when it becomes overloaded. That's happened before. As you note fees spike and it becomes difficult to use. Improvements have made this less likely to happen. Bitcoin is not intended for high volume transactions. Other crypto will likely fill this role.
    The mining reward system is brilliant in its conception. All of the scenarios you've mentioned have happened before. When the price goes down and mining profit margins wane, mining power goes down. When mining power goes down, the algo adjusts to make mining easier to maintain the same production rate. The opposite happens when mining profit margins surge. It's not unlike gold really. With high gold prices more mines become feasible and ramp up production. As a result we will see higher gold production which absent other factors would lead to dropping gold prices and the less profitable mines shutting down again.

    So I could see Bitcoin go on for some years.
    Or it could implode in spectacular fashion.

    Those certainly are the two possibilities.

    .

    Manufacturing precious metals would require expensive and messy nuclear reactions. Mining asteroids would also be extremely expensive for humans. If robots can do the entire missions themselves, that might make it somewhat economical, eventually.

    I'm pretty sure they said that about diamonds, and here we are. I'm not going to write off the possibility, but I'm also not going to worry about it.

    Digital currencies will be developed further for wider use. I don't think that necessarily bodes well for Bitcoin, however. What happens when Bitcoin is no longer the prominent "crypto-currency" ?

    Sure it's always possible that we'll see the decline of BTC or the rise of an alternative. Like stocks you kind of have to keep an eye on it. I don't see this changing any time soon but things may look different in 5 or 10 years.

    If Bitcoin is not used as a medium of exchange, then by definition, it is not a crypto "currency". Bitcoin was originally envisioned as a currency for exchange and not as an "asset". This illustrates that it is hard to predict how things play out. And a complex system like Bitcoin can behave strangely and unexpectedly when severely stressed.

    I would argue that gold is not a medium of exchange either and is also not a currency. It used to be, but not anymore. But it still has its role as a financial asset.

    The variability in the difficulty of mining Bitcoin seems like it makes it much more inefficient in terms of energy usage. I know the reasoning for it is to keep Bitcoin going. But to make mining more difficult and expensive, when there are more mining resources doing it, seems very inefficient.

    I'm not sure what you're measuring this against. Yes the BTC network expends a lot of energy to run and generate coins. Unlike data centers powering the traditional banking system, most Bitcoin is mined with stranded or otherwise-wasted energy. That's because this is the cheapest energy and makes the mining profitable.

    I used to write software for a living. I worked with a guy who often amazed people with how fast he could write an algorithm. His algorithms usually worked quite well - until an unexpected input occurred and then the algorithm would blow up. I suspect that the Bitcoin algorithms haven't been fully stress-tested yet for fringe inputs.

    I'm not sure why you would say this. The Bitcoin code itself has to be one of the most heavily studied and scrutinized code in its 16 years of use and existence. Not only that, there is a billion dollar payday waiting for anyone who can figure out how to crack or exploit it. If there's any software that's been sufficiently proven, Bitcoin is probably it.

  • Options
    dcarrdcarr Posts: 10,054 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @ProofCollection said:

    @dcarr said:

    @ProofCollection said:

    @dcarr said:
    Precious metals have been money for 5,000+ years. Will they still be valued 50 years from now ? Probably (in my opinion).

    Yes, hard to argue with that track record. But in the past few decades the world has gone digital. And again, technology could make it feasible to create precious metals artificially or space mining could make the metals no longer precious. Fortune telling it tough.

    Bitcoin has been around for, what, 15 years ? Will it still be a thing 15 years from now ? I put the odds at 50-50, although I have nothing really to base that on. And that is the problem - there is no historical track record for crypto-currency in general.

    I get it. But the US and other nations are establishing Bitcoin reserves and the future is undeniably digital. It's easy to see the direction things are headed. The future may not be Bitcoin, but things are headed that direction.

    My outlook for Bitcoin is for there to be significant challenges.

    • It is very energy-intensive. Does society really need it ? It seems that it is not really a very efficient medium of exchange.

    It probably won't be used as a medium of exchange. That's why BTC is referred to as digital gold which isn't really a medium of exchange either.
    Does society need it? The success of Bitcoin would indicate that the answer is yes.

    • Will Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC) take over ? I could see this happening as there are ways for governments to implement monetary policy and acquire revenues via CBDC.

    The future is digital. To expect CBs not to adopt new technology is silly. It's not if, it's when. Perhaps not all of them, but at least a few and I think some already have.

    • The Achilles-Heel word has already been mentioned in this thread: "Software". Who controls and writes the software ? The Bitcoin "community". But wherever there is software, there can be hidden manipulation and hidden agendas.

    Nothing is hidden with Bitcoin. The code is public. The only way to change it is to get the majority of the network to run the new code. Not only is that infeasible to convince the majority of the network to adopt "bad" software improvements, but should someone manage to do that in a hostile manner, a portion of the network would run the old code and then the world could decide whether to use the New Bitcoin or the Old Bitcoin. So really the global market would decide what succeeds.

    • As I understand it, the act of "mining" Bitcoin is the mechanism by which Bitcoin transactions are verified. The mining is where all the energy consumption originates. As time goes by, the subsidy for mining is halved at regular time intervals. At some point, there will be no more subsidy for mining and the reward from mining will come entirely from transaction fees. These fees can spike at times of peak demand for urgent transactions. I don't think anyone really knows how Bitcoin will function if everyone rushes for the exits at the same time, and the fees for these urgent transactions spike so high that it becomes impossible to trade. And if the Bitcoin value were to drop precipitously, that would greatly diminish the incentive to do the mining (because the mining reward, in real terms, could become insufficient to make it worthwhile).

    We actually do know how it functions when it becomes overloaded. That's happened before. As you note fees spike and it becomes difficult to use. Improvements have made this less likely to happen. Bitcoin is not intended for high volume transactions. Other crypto will likely fill this role.
    The mining reward system is brilliant in its conception. All of the scenarios you've mentioned have happened before. When the price goes down and mining profit margins wane, mining power goes down. When mining power goes down, the algo adjusts to make mining easier to maintain the same production rate. The opposite happens when mining profit margins surge. It's not unlike gold really. With high gold prices more mines become feasible and ramp up production. As a result we will see higher gold production which absent other factors would lead to dropping gold prices and the less profitable mines shutting down again.

    So I could see Bitcoin go on for some years.
    Or it could implode in spectacular fashion.

    Those certainly are the two possibilities.

    .

    Manufacturing precious metals would require expensive and messy nuclear reactions. Mining asteroids would also be extremely expensive for humans. If robots can do the entire missions themselves, that might make it somewhat economical, eventually.

    I'm pretty sure they said that about diamonds, and here we are. I'm not going to write off the possibility, but I'm also not going to worry about it.

    Digital currencies will be developed further for wider use. I don't think that necessarily bodes well for Bitcoin, however. What happens when Bitcoin is no longer the prominent "crypto-currency" ?

    Sure it's always possible that we'll see the decline of BTC or the rise of an alternative. Like stocks you kind of have to keep an eye on it. I don't see this changing any time soon but things may look different in 5 or 10 years.

    If Bitcoin is not used as a medium of exchange, then by definition, it is not a crypto "currency". Bitcoin was originally envisioned as a currency for exchange and not as an "asset". This illustrates that it is hard to predict how things play out. And a complex system like Bitcoin can behave strangely and unexpectedly when severely stressed.

    I would argue that gold is not a medium of exchange either and is also not a currency. It used to be, but not anymore. But it still has its role as a financial asset.

    The variability in the difficulty of mining Bitcoin seems like it makes it much more inefficient in terms of energy usage. I know the reasoning for it is to keep Bitcoin going. But to make mining more difficult and expensive, when there are more mining resources doing it, seems very inefficient.

    I'm not sure what you're measuring this against. Yes the BTC network expends a lot of energy to run and generate coins. Unlike data centers powering the traditional banking system, most Bitcoin is mined with stranded or otherwise-wasted energy. That's because this is the cheapest energy and makes the mining profitable.

    I used to write software for a living. I worked with a guy who often amazed people with how fast he could write an algorithm. His algorithms usually worked quite well - until an unexpected input occurred and then the algorithm would blow up. I suspect that the Bitcoin algorithms haven't been fully stress-tested yet for fringe inputs.

    I'm not sure why you would say this. The Bitcoin code itself has to be one of the most heavily studied and scrutinized code in its 16 years of use and existence. Not only that, there is a billion dollar payday waiting for anyone who can figure out how to crack or exploit it. If there's any software that's been sufficiently proven, Bitcoin is probably it.

    .

    Manufacturing diamonds does not involve any nuclear reactions. All you do is take carbon and apply heat and pressure to change the bonds between carbon atoms. Nothing in the nucleus of the atoms is changed. To produce gold from something that isn't, you have to add or subtract protons and/or neutrons from the atom's nucleus (thus, a nuclear reaction). This is considerably more difficult than a simple chemical reaction like making diamonds.

    Gold was a medium of exchange for thousands of years. It still is, but it has become too valuable for day-to-day use in commerce.

    When I write that the Bitcoin "system" has not really been tested at the limits, I am not referring to the "hacking" of it. I am referring to unexpected developments in the operating environment. For example, a spike in transaction fees which prompts more selling, which causes higher fees, and an even faster rush for the exit, and so on, like a runaway nuclear reaction.

    But I think a greater risk is something like a disagreement in the "community" over the software. This could emerge at some point, causing confusing "forks" to emerge in the chain. If there are numerous forks, the competition between them could destroy the whole thing.

    .

  • Options
    blitzdudeblitzdude Posts: 7,620 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @coastaljerseyguy said:

    @blitzdude said:
    Added some BTC and ETH this morning, Thank you for the gift. RGDS!

    Keep averaging down.

    Thanks again for the tip. :smiley::sunglasses: RGDS!

    The whole worlds off its rocker, buy Gold™.
    BOOMIN!™
    Wooooha! Did someone just say it's officially "TACO™" Tuesday????
    Retiring at 55, what day is today? :sunglasses:

  • Options
    ProofCollectionProofCollection Posts: 7,809 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @dcarr said:

    @ProofCollection said:

    @dcarr said:

    @ProofCollection said:

    @dcarr said:
    Precious metals have been money for 5,000+ years. Will they still be valued 50 years from now ? Probably (in my opinion).

    Yes, hard to argue with that track record. But in the past few decades the world has gone digital. And again, technology could make it feasible to create precious metals artificially or space mining could make the metals no longer precious. Fortune telling it tough.

    Bitcoin has been around for, what, 15 years ? Will it still be a thing 15 years from now ? I put the odds at 50-50, although I have nothing really to base that on. And that is the problem - there is no historical track record for crypto-currency in general.

    I get it. But the US and other nations are establishing Bitcoin reserves and the future is undeniably digital. It's easy to see the direction things are headed. The future may not be Bitcoin, but things are headed that direction.

    My outlook for Bitcoin is for there to be significant challenges.

    • It is very energy-intensive. Does society really need it ? It seems that it is not really a very efficient medium of exchange.

    It probably won't be used as a medium of exchange. That's why BTC is referred to as digital gold which isn't really a medium of exchange either.
    Does society need it? The success of Bitcoin would indicate that the answer is yes.

    • Will Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC) take over ? I could see this happening as there are ways for governments to implement monetary policy and acquire revenues via CBDC.

    The future is digital. To expect CBs not to adopt new technology is silly. It's not if, it's when. Perhaps not all of them, but at least a few and I think some already have.

    • The Achilles-Heel word has already been mentioned in this thread: "Software". Who controls and writes the software ? The Bitcoin "community". But wherever there is software, there can be hidden manipulation and hidden agendas.

    Nothing is hidden with Bitcoin. The code is public. The only way to change it is to get the majority of the network to run the new code. Not only is that infeasible to convince the majority of the network to adopt "bad" software improvements, but should someone manage to do that in a hostile manner, a portion of the network would run the old code and then the world could decide whether to use the New Bitcoin or the Old Bitcoin. So really the global market would decide what succeeds.

    • As I understand it, the act of "mining" Bitcoin is the mechanism by which Bitcoin transactions are verified. The mining is where all the energy consumption originates. As time goes by, the subsidy for mining is halved at regular time intervals. At some point, there will be no more subsidy for mining and the reward from mining will come entirely from transaction fees. These fees can spike at times of peak demand for urgent transactions. I don't think anyone really knows how Bitcoin will function if everyone rushes for the exits at the same time, and the fees for these urgent transactions spike so high that it becomes impossible to trade. And if the Bitcoin value were to drop precipitously, that would greatly diminish the incentive to do the mining (because the mining reward, in real terms, could become insufficient to make it worthwhile).

    We actually do know how it functions when it becomes overloaded. That's happened before. As you note fees spike and it becomes difficult to use. Improvements have made this less likely to happen. Bitcoin is not intended for high volume transactions. Other crypto will likely fill this role.
    The mining reward system is brilliant in its conception. All of the scenarios you've mentioned have happened before. When the price goes down and mining profit margins wane, mining power goes down. When mining power goes down, the algo adjusts to make mining easier to maintain the same production rate. The opposite happens when mining profit margins surge. It's not unlike gold really. With high gold prices more mines become feasible and ramp up production. As a result we will see higher gold production which absent other factors would lead to dropping gold prices and the less profitable mines shutting down again.

    So I could see Bitcoin go on for some years.
    Or it could implode in spectacular fashion.

    Those certainly are the two possibilities.

    .

    Manufacturing precious metals would require expensive and messy nuclear reactions. Mining asteroids would also be extremely expensive for humans. If robots can do the entire missions themselves, that might make it somewhat economical, eventually.

    I'm pretty sure they said that about diamonds, and here we are. I'm not going to write off the possibility, but I'm also not going to worry about it.

    Digital currencies will be developed further for wider use. I don't think that necessarily bodes well for Bitcoin, however. What happens when Bitcoin is no longer the prominent "crypto-currency" ?

    Sure it's always possible that we'll see the decline of BTC or the rise of an alternative. Like stocks you kind of have to keep an eye on it. I don't see this changing any time soon but things may look different in 5 or 10 years.

    If Bitcoin is not used as a medium of exchange, then by definition, it is not a crypto "currency". Bitcoin was originally envisioned as a currency for exchange and not as an "asset". This illustrates that it is hard to predict how things play out. And a complex system like Bitcoin can behave strangely and unexpectedly when severely stressed.

    I would argue that gold is not a medium of exchange either and is also not a currency. It used to be, but not anymore. But it still has its role as a financial asset.

    The variability in the difficulty of mining Bitcoin seems like it makes it much more inefficient in terms of energy usage. I know the reasoning for it is to keep Bitcoin going. But to make mining more difficult and expensive, when there are more mining resources doing it, seems very inefficient.

    I'm not sure what you're measuring this against. Yes the BTC network expends a lot of energy to run and generate coins. Unlike data centers powering the traditional banking system, most Bitcoin is mined with stranded or otherwise-wasted energy. That's because this is the cheapest energy and makes the mining profitable.

    I used to write software for a living. I worked with a guy who often amazed people with how fast he could write an algorithm. His algorithms usually worked quite well - until an unexpected input occurred and then the algorithm would blow up. I suspect that the Bitcoin algorithms haven't been fully stress-tested yet for fringe inputs.

    I'm not sure why you would say this. The Bitcoin code itself has to be one of the most heavily studied and scrutinized code in its 16 years of use and existence. Not only that, there is a billion dollar payday waiting for anyone who can figure out how to crack or exploit it. If there's any software that's been sufficiently proven, Bitcoin is probably it.

    .

    Manufacturing diamonds does not involve any nuclear reactions. All you do is take carbon and apply heat and pressure to change the bonds between carbon atoms. Nothing in the nucleus of the atoms is changed. To produce gold from something that isn't, you have to add or subtract protons and/or neutrons from the atom's nucleus (thus, a nuclear reaction). This is considerably more difficult than a simple chemical reaction like making diamonds.

    20 years ago artificial diamonds weren't really a thing. Now they are everywhere. Things can change and scale fast. Don't write off artificial gold just yet.

    Gold was a medium of exchange for thousands of years. It still is, but it has become too valuable for day-to-day use in commerce.

    To valuable or too cumbersome? FRNs are almost to the point that they are too cumbersome.

    When I write that the Bitcoin "system" has not really been tested at the limits, I am not referring to the "hacking" of it. I am referring to unexpected developments in the operating environment. For example, a spike in transaction fees which prompts more selling, which causes higher fees, and an even faster rush for the exit, and so on, like a runaway nuclear reaction.

    A few years ago the Bitcoin network was very overloaded. Fees spiked and it took hours to get a transaction processed. They've since added things like the Lightning Network and other measures to speed things up, but I think it's pretty well known and understood what happens when network usage spikes. I believe but I could be wrong, the network just processes the transactions that are paying the highest fees first but eventually everything goes through. It sucks if you're paying for a cup of coffee at a POS, but if you're just sending a few satoshis to your friend it's probably not that big of a deal. But then if you wanted to mail a check or an ounce of gold you're looking at a few days anyway and you could always convert the BTC to a crypto that isn't overloaded.

    But I think a greater risk is something like a disagreement in the "community" over the software. This could emerge at some point, causing confusing "forks" to emerge in the chain. If there are numerous forks, the competition between them could destroy the whole thing.

    Unlikely and again that's already happened. Ever heard of Bitcoin Cash or Bitcoin SV? They forked and everyone ended up with the same amount of coins on both networks. The market has decided what to value each one at and I think the world handled it quite well.

  • Options
    softparadesoftparade Posts: 9,973 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Bitturd

    Gold - the REAL stuff

    Silver ( The REAL McCoy Not paper fantasy)

    COPPER is gutter !

  • Options
    ProofCollectionProofCollection Posts: 7,809 ✭✭✭✭✭

    New highs today! $4400+!

  • Options
    blitzdudeblitzdude Posts: 7,620 ✭✭✭✭✭

    $4331 here in The Commonwealth. I'm showing the high today at $4374. Perhaps $4400+ in Canada. THKS!

    The whole worlds off its rocker, buy Gold™.
    BOOMIN!™
    Wooooha! Did someone just say it's officially "TACO™" Tuesday????
    Retiring at 55, what day is today? :sunglasses:

  • Options
    ProofCollectionProofCollection Posts: 7,809 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @blitzdude said:
    $4331 here in The Commonwealth. I'm showing the high today at $4374. Perhaps $4400+ in Canada. THKS!

    The Comex prices are the same everywhere. It is tiresome and uninteresting to discuss minor variances in pricing among different markets, especially 6 hours after a new high is made and announced and the price pulls back ~$50.

  • Options
    GoldFinger1969GoldFinger1969 Posts: 3,410 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited December 21, 2025 12:58AM

    I did see where Saxe Bank's 2026 prediction list included the possibility that if China backed their currency with gold, they would be able to increase their reserve status. I think it's not happening, and even if it did, the CCP still maintains capital controls which are anathema to any currency maintaining reserve status at central banks.

    They did say IF it happened, you'd be looking at $6,000 gold. I agree there. :)

  • Options
    ProofCollectionProofCollection Posts: 7,809 ✭✭✭✭✭

    New ATHs tonight.
    So the Gold/Silver ratio IMO is headed to at least prior support at around 30-33, likely coming sometime this year. There's a good chance we'll overshoot it.

  • Options
    CaptHenwayCaptHenway Posts: 33,872 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Did somebody declare war, or something?

    Numismatist. 54 year member ANA. Former ANA Senior Authenticator. Winner of four ANA Heath Literary Awards; three Wayte and Olga Raymond Literary Awards; Numismatist of the Year Award 2009, and ANA Lifetime Achievement Award 2020. Also won the PNG's Robert Friedberg Award for "The Enigmatic Lincoln Cents of 1922," Available now from Whitman or Amazon.
  • Options
    GoldFinger1969GoldFinger1969 Posts: 3,410 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited December 22, 2025 12:36AM

    @ProofCollection said:
    New ATHs tonight.
    So the Gold/Silver ratio IMO is headed to at least prior support at around 30-33, likely coming sometime this year. >There's a good chance we'll overshoot it.

    I can't see that happening....you're either predicting a gold meltdown and/or a huge silver rise. Even at 40x.....with silver at the current price, you're talking gold at $2,800 or so. That's a HUGE drop considering you have bids underneath from major CBs, SWFs, HNW individuals, folks fleeing BTC, etc.

    If gold doesn't meltdown and holds over $4K....you'd need silver to rise over $100, or about 40% from here without gold doing anything.

    Bold call, and if you're right, I'll definitely applaud you. I just can't see it.

  • Options
    GoldFinger1969GoldFinger1969 Posts: 3,410 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @CaptHenway said:
    Did somebody declare war, or something?

    Nope, just the "Let's Run It Hot" belief as you can see stocks, commodities, and other risk assets doing well. Bond yields and spreads well-contained.

  • Options
    RedneckHBRedneckHB Posts: 20,161 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @GoldFinger1969 said:

    @ProofCollection said:
    New ATHs tonight.
    So the Gold/Silver ratio IMO is headed to at least prior support at around 30-33, likely coming sometime this year. >There's a good chance we'll overshoot it.

    I can't see that happening....you're either predicting a gold meltdown and/or a huge silver rise. Even at 40x.....with silver at the current price, you're talking gold at $2,800 or so. That's a HUGE drop considering you have bids underneath from major CBs, SWFs, HNW individuals, folks fleeing BTC, etc.

    If gold doesn't meltdown and holds over $4K....you'd need silver to rise over $100, or about 40% from here without gold doing anything.

    Bold call, and if you're right, I'll definitely applaud you. I just can't see it.

    Never underestimate the power of a mania. To act on such a move is the problem. In 2011 the ratio hit 32 and folk had a window of about 12-24 hours to capitalize, because just 5 days later the ratio was back to 43. And given today environment, it would probably be near mpossible to realize that ratio due to counter-party risk (they aint gonna offer spot prices).

    Excuses are tools of the ignorant

    Knowledge is the enemy of fear

  • Options
    jmski52jmski52 Posts: 23,959 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited December 22, 2025 6:25AM

    We haven't seen even a hint of mania at this point. Retail still isn't standing in lines around the block. In fact, retail sellers in the US are liquidating to make ends meet but the price is still rising.

    You fall into the trap of thinking that you must buy at the extreme bottom and sell just before a blowoff top. Good luck with that. Same mistake that blitz makes with his SLV clicker.

    In 2011 after the price peak I sold a 1/2 bag of 90% at around 36 and was happy to do it. I didn't do that because I was worried about a price drop. I did it to buy a nice Large Cent but that's another story.

    Volatility is to be expected. The fundamentals will win, but not if you think that you can time the market. Blitz jumped out of SLV, just in time to watch it rise further. Such is the temptation of the bogus paper market and the mouse trader.

    Q: Are You Printing Money? Bernanke: Not Literally

    I knew it would happen.
  • Options
    RedneckHBRedneckHB Posts: 20,161 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @jmski52 said:
    We haven't seen even a hint of mania at this point. Retail still isn't standing in lines around the block. In fact, retail sellers in the US are liquidating to make ends meet but the price is still rising.

    You fall into the trap of thinking that you must buy at the extreme bottom and sell just before a blowoff top. Good luck with that. Same mistake that blitz makes with his SLV clicker.

    In 2011 after the price peak I sold a 1/2 bag of 90% at around 36 and was happy to do it. I didn't do that because I was worried about a price drop. I did it to buy a nice Large Cent but that's another story.

    Volatility is to be expected. The fundamentals will win, but not if you think that you can time the market. Blitz jumped out of SLV, just in time to watch it rise further. Such is the temptation of the bogus paper market and the mouse trader.

    I never said we are currently in a mania. Perhaps your cognitive bias blinds your comprehension?

    I dont fall into the traps...I make them ;).

    Excuses are tools of the ignorant

    Knowledge is the enemy of fear

  • Options
    ProofCollectionProofCollection Posts: 7,809 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @jmski52 said:
    We haven't seen even a hint of mania at this point. Retail still isn't standing in lines around the block. In fact, retail sellers in the US are liquidating to make ends meet but the price is still rising.

    You fall into the trap of thinking that you must buy at the extreme bottom and sell just before a blowoff top. Good luck with that. Same mistake that blitz makes with his SLV clicker.

    In 2011 after the price peak I sold a 1/2 bag of 90% at around 36 and was happy to do it. I didn't do that because I was worried about a price drop. I did it to buy a nice Large Cent but that's another story.

    Volatility is to be expected. The fundamentals will win, but not if you think that you can time the market. Blitz jumped out of SLV, just in time to watch it rise further. Such is the temptation of the bogus paper market and the mouse trader.

    Yep. People have no idea that the market dynamics have completely changed. This is the beginning of a move, not the end.

  • Options
    jmski52jmski52 Posts: 23,959 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I never said we are currently in a mania. Perhaps your cognitive bias blinds your comprehension?

    I dont fall into the traps...I make them ;).

    You mentioned a mania, and you set traps in addition to suggesting that I have cognitive bias.

    Interesting. What is your point?

    Of course you made the suggestion of a mania. Why would you mention it at all? Plausible deniability - if you didn't exactly say that we are in a mania, you can always bring it up to scare "folks" away from precious metals. Right?

    Never underestimate the power of a mania. To act on such a move is the problem. In 2011 the ratio hit 32 and folk had a window of about 12-24 hours to capitalize, because just 5 days later the ratio was back to 43. And given today environment, it would probably be near mpossible to realize that ratio due to counter-party risk (they aint gonna offer spot prices).

    Why do you think that we "must" hit a ratio window that only lasts 12-24 hours? That's not the reason for owning physical metals. The main reason is because your financial system (the one who employs you) isn't stable or reliable anymore.

    Q: Are You Printing Money? Bernanke: Not Literally

    I knew it would happen.
  • Options
    blitzdudeblitzdude Posts: 7,620 ✭✭✭✭✭

    God bless The Metal of Kings. RGDS!!!!!!!

    The whole worlds off its rocker, buy Gold™.
    BOOMIN!™
    Wooooha! Did someone just say it's officially "TACO™" Tuesday????
    Retiring at 55, what day is today? :sunglasses:

  • Options
    ProofCollectionProofCollection Posts: 7,809 ✭✭✭✭✭

    $4500 is here!

  • Options
    MsMorrisineMsMorrisine Posts: 39,461 ✭✭✭✭✭

    kitco 4489.90

    Current maintainer of Stone's Master List of Favorite Websites // My BST transactions
  • Options
    RedneckHBRedneckHB Posts: 20,161 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited December 22, 2025 7:57PM

    @jmski52 said:
    I never said we are currently in a mania. Perhaps your cognitive bias blinds your comprehension?

    I dont fall into the traps...I make them ;).

    You mentioned a mania, and you set traps in addition to suggesting that I have cognitive bias.

    Interesting. What is your point?

    Of course you made the suggestion of a mania. Why would you mention it at all? Plausible deniability - if you didn't exactly say that we are in a mania, you can always bring it up to scare "folks" away from precious metals. Right?

    Never underestimate the power of a mania. To act on such a move is the problem. In 2011 the ratio hit 32 and folk had a window of about 12-24 hours to capitalize, because just 5 days later the ratio was back to 43. And given today environment, it would probably be near mpossible to realize that ratio due to counter-party risk (they aint gonna offer spot prices).

    Why do you think that we "must" hit a ratio window that only lasts 12-24 hours? That's not the reason for owning physical metals. The main reason is because your financial system (the one who employs you) isn't stable or reliable anymore.

    Yes...jmski...I said dont underestimate a mania...a gsr of 30 because gold is 6000 and silver at 200 would be a mania. I said in response to goldfinger saying it wouldn't happen. If gsr hit 30 in short order because gold was 6000 and silver 200, then yes, that would make a mania. The rest of your comment is just biased and contemptuous.

    The reason metals are moving isnt because of the financial system...but other things, bigger things, are breaking down.

    Excuses are tools of the ignorant

    Knowledge is the enemy of fear

Sign In or Register to comment.